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WO2012045150A1 - Detection of fusobacterium in a gastrointestinal sample to diagnose gastrointestinal cancer - Google Patents

Detection of fusobacterium in a gastrointestinal sample to diagnose gastrointestinal cancer Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2012045150A1
WO2012045150A1 PCT/CA2011/001108 CA2011001108W WO2012045150A1 WO 2012045150 A1 WO2012045150 A1 WO 2012045150A1 CA 2011001108 W CA2011001108 W CA 2011001108W WO 2012045150 A1 WO2012045150 A1 WO 2012045150A1
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Prior art keywords
fusobacterium
protein
seq
nucleatum
sample
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PCT/CA2011/001108
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French (fr)
Inventor
Emma Allen-Vercoe
Robert Holt
Richard Moore
Rene Warren
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British Columbia Cancer Agency Branch
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Application filed by British Columbia Cancer Agency Branch filed Critical British Columbia Cancer Agency Branch
Priority to CA2813080A priority Critical patent/CA2813080A1/en
Priority to EP11830147.2A priority patent/EP2646567A4/en
Priority to AU2011313763A priority patent/AU2011313763A1/en
Priority to KR1020137011756A priority patent/KR20140033309A/en
Priority to US13/877,421 priority patent/US20130259899A1/en
Publication of WO2012045150A1 publication Critical patent/WO2012045150A1/en

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    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6876Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes
    • C12Q1/6883Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes for diseases caused by alterations of genetic material
    • C12Q1/6886Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes for diseases caused by alterations of genetic material for cancer
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/574Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K39/00Medicinal preparations containing antigens or antibodies
    • A61K39/02Bacterial antigens
    • A61K39/114Fusobacterium
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P31/00Antiinfectives, i.e. antibiotics, antiseptics, chemotherapeutics
    • A61P31/04Antibacterial agents
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P35/00Antineoplastic agents
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P37/00Drugs for immunological or allergic disorders
    • A61P37/02Immunomodulators
    • A61P37/04Immunostimulants
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    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/02Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving viable microorganisms
    • C12Q1/04Determining presence or kind of microorganism; Use of selective media for testing antibiotics or bacteriocides; Compositions containing a chemical indicator therefor
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    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6876Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes
    • C12Q1/6888Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes for detection or identification of organisms
    • C12Q1/689Nucleic acid products used in the analysis of nucleic acids, e.g. primers or probes for detection or identification of organisms for bacteria
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/569Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for microorganisms, e.g. protozoa, bacteria, viruses
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/569Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for microorganisms, e.g. protozoa, bacteria, viruses
    • G01N33/56911Bacteria
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/574Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer
    • G01N33/57407Specifically defined cancers
    • G01N33/57419Specifically defined cancers of colon
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/574Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer
    • G01N33/57407Specifically defined cancers
    • G01N33/57446Specifically defined cancers of stomach or intestine
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
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    • C12Q2600/00Oligonucleotides characterized by their use
    • C12Q2600/118Prognosis of disease development
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
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    • C12Q2600/00Oligonucleotides characterized by their use
    • C12Q2600/136Screening for pharmacological compounds
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N2333/00Assays involving biological materials from specific organisms or of a specific nature
    • G01N2333/195Assays involving biological materials from specific organisms or of a specific nature from bacteria

Definitions

  • the present invention provides, in part, methods for diagnosis or treatment of gastrointestinal cancers.
  • Cancers of the gastrointestinal tract represent a significant percentage of all cancer related deaths, and include gastric cancer, colorectal and esophageal cancers.
  • Colorectal carcinoma (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer deaths, responsible for
  • CRC ulcerative colitis .
  • cancers in which specific somatic mutations on oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes associated with progression from adenomatous lesions (polyps) to invasive carcinoma have been identified (Vogelstein et al. 1988). Inflammation has been recognized as a risk factor for CRC (McLean et al. 201 1 , Wu et al. 2009).
  • Fusobacterium nucleatum is an invasive (Han et al. 2000, Swidsinski et al. 201 1), adherent (Weiss et al. 2000) and pro-inflammatory (Peyret-Lacombe et al. 2009,
  • F. nucleatum has been implicated in cerebral abscesses (Kai et al. 2008) and pericarditis (Han et al. 2003) and it is one of the Fusobacterium species implicated in Lemierre's syndrome, a rare form of thrombophlebitis (Weeks et al. 2010).
  • Fusobacteria including F. nucleatum, have been implicated in acute appendicitis, where they have been found by
  • IHC immunohistochemistry
  • the present invention provides, in part, methods for diagnosis or treatment of gastrointestinal cancers.
  • the invention provides a method for prognosing or diagnosing a gastrointestinal cancer in a subject, by providing a sample from the subject; and detecting a Fusobacterium sp. in the sample, where a positive detection of the Fusobacterium sp. indicates a prognosis or diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer.
  • the detection may include contacting the sample with an antibody that specifically binds a Fusobacterium sp. antigen or a nucleotide sequence that hybridizes to a Fusobacterium sp. nucleotide sequence, where the specific binding of the antibody to the Fusobacterium sp. antigen or the hybridization of the nucleotide sequence to the Fusobacterium sp. nucleotide sequence indicates a prognosis or diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer.
  • the Fusobacterium sp. antigen or nucleotide sequence may be selected from the group consisting of one or more of the polypeptides descried herein.
  • the gastrointestinal cancer may be a colorectal carcinoma.
  • the subject may have or may be suspected of having chronic inflammatory bowel disease.
  • the subject may be a human.
  • the sample may be a colon sample, a rectal sample, a stool sample, an adenomatous lesion or polyp, or may be derived from an abscess.
  • the Fusobacterium sp. may be a F. nucleatum.
  • the invention provides a method of screening for a compound for treating a gastrointestinal cancer, by providing a test compound; and determining whether the test compound inhibits the growth or activity of a Fusobacterium sp. , where a compound that inhibits the growth or activity of the Fusobacterium sp. is a candidate compound for treating a gastrointestinal cancer.
  • the invention provides a method of treating a gastrointestinal cancer, by administering a compound or composition that induces an immunological response against a Fusobacterium sp. to a subject diagnosed with or suspected of having a gastrointestinal cancer.
  • FIGURE 1 is a schematic diagram showing a strategy for detection of candidate infectious agents
  • FIGURE 2 shows the detection of HVP DNA sequences in normal and tumour samples
  • FIGURE 3A shows the detection of Fusobacterium DNA sequences
  • FIGURE 3B shows the number of sequencing read pairs that match known microbial genomes for the 25 most abundant genomes.
  • FIGURE 4A shows the relative abundance of Fusobacterium in tumour versus normal colorectal carcinoma biopsies. Relative amounts of Fusobacterium DNA were determined between tumour and matched normal biopsies in 99 subjects, using
  • FIGURE 4B shows the detection of Fusobacterium DNA sequences by qPCR in cohort of 90 patients using matched normal and tumor samples.
  • FIGURES 5A-B show the frequency of metastasis increases with higher
  • Fusobacterium abundance in tumour biopsies Patients with 5X or greater Fusobacterium in their tumour biopsies versus matched normal tissue were compared to those patients with less than 5X relative amounts of Fusobacterium.
  • a significantly higher number of patients from the high Fusobacterium group (A) had more tumour spreading in their lymph nodes as measured by their surgical TNM scores than the low Fusobacterium group (B) (one-tailed Fisher's exact test p-value 0.0035).
  • the present invention provides, in part, methods for diagnosis or treatment of gastrointestinal cancers by detection of Fusobacterium.
  • Fusobacterium nucleatum a known pathogen associated previously with periodontal disease, is associated with gastrointestinal cancer.
  • Fusobacterium isolated from CRC tumour samples is invasive.
  • neoplasm any unwanted growth of cells serving no physiological function.
  • a cell of a neoplasm has been released from its normal cell division control, i.e., a cell whose growth is not regulated by the ordinary biochemical and physical influences in the cellular environment.
  • a neoplastic cell proliferates to form a clone of cells which are either benign or malignant.
  • cancers or neoplasms include, without limitation, transformed and immortalized cells, tumours, and carcinomas such as breast cell carcinomas and prostate carcinomas.
  • the term cancer includes cell growths that are technically benign but which carry the risk of becoming malignant i.e. a "malignancy.”
  • malignancy is meant an abnormal growth of any cell type or tissue.
  • malignancy includes cell growths that are technically benign but which carry the risk of becoming malignant.
  • This term also includes any cancer, carcinoma, neoplasm, neoplasia, or tumor. Identification and classification of types and stages of cancers may be performed by using for example information provided by the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program of the National Cancer Institute.
  • SEER End Results
  • GI cancers can include cancers of the upper GI tract such as, esophagus (e.g., squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma), or stomach (e.g., gastric carcinoma, signet ring cell carcinoma, gastric lymphoma) or of the lower GI tract such as, small intestine (e.g., duodenal cancer/adenocarcinoma), colon rectum (e.g., colorectal polyps/Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, juvenile polyposis syndrome, familial adenomatous polyposis/Gardner's syndrome, Cronkhite-Canada syndrome, familial adenomatous polyposis, hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer, etc.), anus (e.g., squamous cell carcinoma).
  • esophagus e.g., squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma
  • stomach e.g., gastric carcinoma
  • the methods and compounds described or referenced herein may pertain to a condition or a cancer that is "related" to a GI cancer.
  • Such cancers can include, for example, liver cancer or pancreatic cancer, or a cancer of a tissue or organ to which a colorectal tumour or cell has spread by metastasis.
  • conditions such as abscesses in other tissues, such as liver, are included.
  • Fusobacterium is meant a genus of gram-negative, anaerobic, rod-shaped bacteria found as normal flora in the mouth and large bowel and often in necrotic tissue (Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition.
  • Fusobacterium species are pathogenic to humans (Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 8th edition. ⁇ 2009, Elsevier). Fusobacterium species include F. gonidiaformans and F. mortiferum (occurring in respiratory, urogenital, and gastrointestinal infections); F. necrophorum (occurring in disseminated infections involving necrotic lesions, abscesses, and bacteremia), F.
  • a Fusobacterium species includes a Fusobacterium sp. strain 3_1_36A2, Fusobacterium sp. strain 3_1_27, Fusobacterium sp. strain 7_1 , Fusobacterium sp. strain 4_1_13, Fusobacterium sp. strain Dl 1,
  • F. nucleatum or “F. nucleatum' ' ' is meant an invasive, adherent and pro-inflammatory anaerobic bacterium.
  • a F. nucleatum includes a F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586, F. nucleatum subsp.
  • the F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586 has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences referenced in GenBank Accession No. AE009951 or to NC_003454.1 or a fragment or variant thereof.
  • the F. nucleatum subsp. polymorphum ATCC 10953 has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences referenced in GenBank Accession No. NZ_CM000440, or a fragment or variant thereof.
  • the Fusobacterium sp. strain 3 1 36A2 has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences referenced in GenBank Accession Nos.
  • a Fusobacterium sequence according to the invention has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences listed in Table 4, or encodes a polypeptide as described in Table 4, or other sequences described or referenced herein, or fragments or variants thereof.
  • the terms "nucleic acid” or “nucleic acid molecule” encompass both RNA (plus and minus strands) and DNA, including cDNA, genomic DNA (gDNA), and synthetic (e.g., chemically synthesized) DNA.
  • the nucleic acid may be double-stranded or single- stranded.
  • the nucleic acid may be the sense strand or the antisense strand.
  • a nucleic acid molecule may be any chain of two or more covalently bonded nucleotides, including naturally occurring or non-naturally occurring nucleotides, or nucleotide analogs or derivatives.
  • RNA is meant a sequence of two or more covalently bonded, naturally occurring or modified ribonucleotides.
  • phosphorothioate RNA is phosphorothioate RNA.
  • DNA is meant a sequence of two or more covalently bonded, naturally occurring or modified
  • cDNA complementary or copy DNA produced from an RNA template by the action of RNA-dependent DNA polymerase (reverse
  • a "cDNA clone” means a duplex DNA sequence complementary to an RNA molecule of interest, carried in a cloning vector.
  • complementary is meant that two nucleic acids, e.g., DNA or RNA, contain a sufficient number of nucleotides which are capable of forming Watson-Crick base pairs to produce a region of double- strandedness between the two nucleic acids.
  • each nucleotide in a nucleic acid molecule need not form a matched Watson-Crick base pair with a nucleotide in an opposing complementary strand to form a duplex.
  • a nucleic acid molecule is "complementary" to another nucleic acid molecule if it hybridizes, under conditions of high stringency, with the second nucleic acid molecule.
  • a "substantially identical" sequence is an amino acid or nucleotide sequence that differs from a reference sequence only by one or more conservative substitutions, as discussed herein, or by one or more non-conservative substitutions, deletions, or insertions located at positions of the sequence that do not destroy the biological function of the amino acid or nucleic acid molecule.
  • Such a sequence can be any value from 50% to 99%, or more generally at least 50% 55% or 60%, or at least 65%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, or 95%, or as much as 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% identical when optimally aligned at the amino acid or nucleotide level to the sequence used for comparison using, for example, the Align Program (Myers and Miller, CABIOS, 1989, 4: 1 1-17) or FASTA.
  • the length of comparison sequences may be at least 2, 5, 10, or 15 amino acids, or at least 20, 25, or 30 amino acids. In alternate embodiments, the length of comparison sequences may be at least 35, 40, or 50 amino acids, or over 60, 80, or 100 amino acids.
  • the length of comparison sequences may be at least 5, 10, 15, 20, or 25 nucleotides, or at least 30, 40, or 50 nucleotides. In alternate embodiments, the length of comparison sequences may be at least 60, 70, 80, or 90 nucleotides, or over 100, 200, or 500 nucleotides. Sequence identity can be readily measured using publicly available sequence analysis software (e.g., Sequence Analysis Software Package of the Genetics Computer Group, University of Wisconsin Biotechnology Center, 1710 University
  • BLAST software available from the National Library of Medicine, or as described herein).
  • useful software include the programs Pile- up and PrettyBox. Such software matches similar sequences by assigning degrees of homology to various substitutions, deletions, substitutions, and other modifications.
  • two nucleic acid sequences may be "substantially identical" if they hybridize under high stringency conditions.
  • high stringency conditions are, for example, conditions that allow hybridization comparable with the hybridization that occurs using a DNA probe of at least 500 nucleotides in length, in a buffer containing 0.5 M NaHP0 4 , pH 7.2, 7% SDS, 1 mM EDTA, and 1% BSA
  • fraction V at a temperature of 65°C, or a buffer containing 48% formamide, 4.8x SSC, 0.2 M Tris-Cl, pH 7.6, lx Denhardt's solution, 10% dextran sulfate, and 0.1% SDS, at a temperature of 42°C. (These are typical conditions for high stringency northern or
  • Hybridizations may be carried out over a period of about 20 to 30 minutes, or about 2 to 6 hours, or about 10 to 15 hours, or over 24 hours or more.
  • High stringency hybridization is also relied upon for the success of numerous techniques routinely performed by molecular biologists, such as high stringency PCR, DNA sequencing, single strand conformational polymorphism analysis, and in situ hybridization. In contrast to northern and Southern hybridizations, these techniques are usually performed with relatively short probes (e.g., usually about 16 nucleotides or longer for PCR or sequencing and about 40 nucleotides or longer for in situ hybridization).
  • a nucleic acid sequence may be detectably labelled.
  • Substantially identical sequences may for example be sequences that are substantially identical to the Fusobacterium species sequences described or referenced herein, or fragments or variants thereof.
  • An antibody "specifically binds" an antigen when it recognises and binds the antigen, for example, an antigen from a Fusobacterium, such as a F. nucleatum, but does not substantially recognise and bind other molecules in a sample, for example, an antigen from a different species.
  • Such an antibody has, for example, an affinity for the antigen which is at least 10, 100, 1000 or 10000 times greater than the affinity of the antibody for another reference molecule in a sample.
  • An antibody may be detectably labelled.
  • detectably labelled any means for marking and identifying the presence of a molecule, e.g., an oligonucleotide probe or primer, a gene or fragment thereof, or a cDNA molecule.
  • Methods for detectably-labelling a molecule are well known in the art and include, without limitation, radioactive labelling (e.g., with an isotope such
  • nonradioactive labelling such as, enzymatic labelling (for example, using horseradish peroxidase or alkaline phosphatase), chemiluminescent labeling, fluorescent labeling (for example, using fluorescein), bioluminescent labeling, or antibody detection of a ligand attached to the probe.
  • enzymatic labelling for example, using horseradish peroxidase or alkaline phosphatase
  • chemiluminescent labeling for example, using fluorescein
  • fluorescent labeling for example, using fluorescein
  • bioluminescent labeling for example, using antibody detection of a ligand attached to the probe.
  • a molecule that is detectably labeled by an indirect means for example, a molecule that is bound with a first moiety (such as biotin) that is, in turn, bound to a second moiety that may be observed or assayed (such as fluorescein-labeled streptavidin).
  • Labels also include digoxigenin
  • sample can be any organ, tissue, cell, or cell extract isolated from a subject, such as a sample isolated from a mammal having a gastrointestinal cancer or suspected of having a gastrointestinal cancer.
  • a sample can include, without limitation, cells or tissue (e.g., from a biopsy or autopsy) from any part of the gastrointestinal tract (including without limitation, colon, stomach, stool, anus, rectum, duodenum), a gastrointestinal cell lysate, cell culture or culture medium, or any other specimen, or any extract thereof, obtained from a patient (human or animal), test subject, or experimental animal.
  • a sample may also include, without limitation, products produced in cell culture by normal or transformed cells (e.g., via recombinant DNA or monoclonal antibody technology).
  • a sample may also include, without limitation, any organ, tissue, cell, or cell extract isolated from a non-mammalian subject, such as an insect or a worm.
  • a "sample” may also be a cell or cell line created under experimental conditions, that is not directly isolated from a subject.
  • a sample can also be cell-free, artificially derived or synthesised.
  • a sample may be from a gastrointestinal cell or tissue known to be cancerous, suspected of being cancerous, or believed not be cancerous (e.g., normal or control). In some embodiments, an oral sample is specifically excluded.
  • a "subject” may be a human, non-human primate, rat, mouse, cow, horse, pig, sheep, goat, dog, cat, etc.
  • the subject may be a clinical patient, a clinical trial volunteer, an experimental animal, etc.
  • the subject may be suspected of having or at risk for having a GI cancer or related condition or cancer, be diagnosed with a GI cancer or related condition or cancer, or be a control subject that is confirmed to not have a GI cancer or related condition or cancer. Diagnostic methods for GI cancer or related condition or cancer and the clinical delineation of such diagnoses are known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
  • association of an invasive Fusobacterium with a GI cancer permits the use of this association for screening methods.
  • Such screens may be performed using assays as described herein or known in the art.
  • a GI cancer or related condition or cancer may be treated by administering an effective amount of a compound (e.g., an antibiotic) or a composition (e.g., a vaccine) effective against a Fusobacterium, such as a F. nucleatum.
  • a vaccine may include a Fusobacterium or antigen thereof (e.g., a polypeptide encoded by one or more of the Fusobacterium sequences described or referenced herein, or known in the art, or a whole bacterium, such as a killed
  • an immunogenically effective amount of a compound of the invention can be provided, alone or in combination with other compounds, with an immunological adjuvant, for example, Freund's incomplete adjuvant, dimethyldioctadecylammonium hydroxide, or aluminum hydroxide.
  • an immunological adjuvant for example, Freund's incomplete adjuvant, dimethyldioctadecylammonium hydroxide, or aluminum hydroxide.
  • the compound may also be linked with a carrier molecule, such as bovine serum albumin or keyhole limpet hemocyanin to enhance immunogenicity.
  • compositions or vaccines be combined with more traditional and existing therapies for GI cancer or related condition or cancer.
  • An "effective amount” includes a therapeutically effective amount or a
  • a “therapeutically effective amount” refers to an amount effective, at dosages and for periods of time necessary, to achieve the desired therapeutic result, such as treatment of a GI cancer or related condition or cancer.
  • a therapeutically effective amount of a compound may vary according to factors such as the disease state, age, sex, and weight of the individual, and the ability of the compound to elicit a desired response in the individual. Dosage regimens may be adjusted to provide the optimum therapeutic response.
  • a therapeutically effective amount is also one in which any toxic or detrimental effects of the compound are outweighed by the therapeutically beneficial effects.
  • prophylactically effective amount refers to an amount effective, at dosages and for periods of time necessary, to achieve the desired prophylactic result, such prophlaxis of a GI cancer or related condition or cancer.
  • a prophylactic dose is used in subjects prior to or at an earlier stage of disease, so that a prophylactically effective amount may be less than a therapeutically effective amount.
  • EXAMPLE 1 Fusobacterium nucleatum infection is prevalent in human colorectal carcinoma
  • Deep transcriptome sequencing of tumour/normal specimens from 12 subjects was performed using Illumina platform at the Genome Sciences Center at the BC Cancer Agency, as outlined in Fig. 1.
  • Validation studies were performed using qPCR to test matched and normal pairs of specimens from colorectal carcinoma subjects.
  • HPV virus was detected in one of the twelve patients (Fig. 2).
  • Fusobacterium was detected in four of the twelve patient samples (Fig. 3A).
  • RNA was isolated from frozen sections of eleven matched pairs of CRC and adjacent normal tissue specimens. RNA was purified by host ribosomal sequence depletion, rather than poly-A selection, in order to retain non-polyadenylated sequences of potential microbial origin. In our screen, we analyzed RNA rather than DNA in order to detect active, transcribing microorganisms and to allow for the detection of RNA viruses that may be present.
  • BCCA-TTR BC Cancer Agency Tumour Tissue Repository
  • BCCA REB BC Cancer Agency Tumour Tissue Repository
  • SOPs Standard Operating Procedures
  • Specimens are handled with very close attention to maintaining integrity and isolation.
  • Overall average collection time time from removal from surgical field to cryopreservation in liquid nitrogen
  • Illumina RNASeq libraries were constructed, barcoded, and pooled, and 2 lanes of paired end sequencing data were obtained using the Illumina GAIIx platform. Reads were filtered for base quality and low complexity, then aligned pairwise to human rRNA and cDNA and genome (hgl 8) reference sequences using Burrows-Wheeler Aligner (BWA). Aligned reads were removed from the data set, leaving 34.9M pairs (Table 1).
  • RNA quality and concentration was assessed using Agilent Bioanalyzer 2000 RNA Nanochips. Ribosomal RNAs were depleted from lmg of total RNA using the manufacturer's protocol for the RiboMinus Eukaryote Kit for RNA-Seq (Invitrogen). Depletion was assessed using Agilent Bioanalyzer 2000 RNA Nanochips.
  • Each paired-end library was PCR amplified for 15 cycles using the standard Illumina PE1 PCR primer plus one of 12 modified PE2 primers, each including a unique six base insertion as an index sequence. Libraries prepared using indexed primers were then combined in pools of 11 each (one tumour pool, one control pool) gel purified, and then sequenced on the Illumina GAIIx platform. One lane of 75 bp paired end sequence was obtained for each of the two pools.
  • Paired-end sequence reads from indexed tumour and adjacent normal sample libraries were processed. Briefly, corresponding human RNA-Seq libraries were aligned with BWA (version 0.5.4 [sample -o 1000, default options] sequentially against human rRNA , cDNA and genome reference sequences. Pairs aligning logically, or containing reads having either an average base quality below phred 20 (Ewing et al. 1998) and/or more than 20 consecutive homopolymeric bases were subtracted from the original data.
  • Read pairs that remained unaligned to any of the human sequence databases were used to interrogate a custom-built sequence collection of well-characterized bacterial and viral genes and genomes using novoalign (version 2.05.20 [-o SAM -r A -R 0, default options]). Alignments were run on a single 3 GHz 8 CPU Intel(R) Xeon(R) 64-bit 61GB RAM computer running CentOS release 5.4. Multiplexed reads from the tumour and normal libraries were deconvoluted according to sequence tags (i.e., barcodes) and the number of read pairs that mapped unambiguously to a single location were tallied for each indexed sample and normalized against the sample read count.
  • sequence tags i.e., barcodes
  • read pair count was reported for each GenBank accession in our microbial genome database, sorted in decreasing order by the sum of unambiguous pairs and PERL scripts were developed to mine these data. Read counts were graphically visualized first by clustering common accession reads using UPGMA (Sokal and Michener, 1958) and then displayed as a heat map (loglO scale) using the Mayday package (http://www-ps.informatik.uni- tuebingen.de/mayday/wp/).
  • F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586
  • F. nucleatum was the organism with the highest number of hits overall (21% of all alignments) and nine of the eleven subjects showed at least two-fold higher read counts in tumour relative to corresponding control tissue.
  • the abundance of normalized bacterial read pairs ranged from zero to a maximum of 66,896. Differential abundance ranged from 0.1 to 256-fold, with a mean overabundance of 79-fold.
  • the majority of the hits were to highly abundant F. nucleatum ribosomal transcripts but other non-ribosomal F. nucleatum gene products were also detected. More specifically, the distribution of hits from colorectal carcinoma NA-Seq data to the annotated F.nucleatum subsp.
  • nucleatum ATCC 25586 genome showed 87% of the hits to be to LSU Ribosomal RNA 731537-734463, 9% of the hits to SSU Ribosomal RNA, 1% to LSU Ribosomal RNA 1073886-1076812, and the remaining 3% to other hits with more than 10 pairs (e.g., hypothetical protein FN0264, hypothetical protein FN1792, Asn tRNA, SSU Ribosomal RNA elongation factor Tu, pyruvate- flavodoxin
  • oxidoreductase protein translation elongation factor G (EF-G), acyl carrier protein, hypothetical protein FN1314, SSU ribosomal protein S6P, CIpB protein, SSU ribosomal protein SI OP, putative cytoplasmic protein, preprotein translocase subunit SecY, 50S ribosomal protein L3 IP, 50S ribosomal protein L32P, 50S ribosomal protein L33P, protein translation initiation factor 1 , DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit alpha, 50S ribosomal protein L3P, 50S ribosomal protein L2, 50S ribosomal protein LI , flavodoxin FldA, hypothetical protein FN1309, 30S ribosomal protein S2, 30S ribosomal protein S4, major outer membrane protein, alkyl hydroperoxide reductase C22 protein, 50S ribosomal protein LI OP, Glu tRNA, 50S ribosomal protein
  • a custom TaqMan primer/probe set was designed to amplify F. nucleatum DNA that matched the contiguous sequence from the WTSS experiment.
  • the cycle threshold (Ct) values for Fusobacterium were normalized to the amount of human biopsy gDNA in each reaction by using a primer/probe set for the reference gene, prostaglandin transporter (PGT), as previously described (Wilson et al. 2006).
  • PGT prostaglandin transporter
  • the fold difference (2 -DDCt) in Fusobacterium abundance in tumour versus normal tissue was calculated by subtracting DCttumour from DCtnormal where DCt is the difference in threshold cycle number for the test and reference assay.
  • Isolated biopsy DNA was quantified by PicoGreen Assay (invitrogen) on a Wallac Victor spectrophotometer (Perkin Elmer). Each reaction contained 5 ng DNA and was assayed in duplicate in 20 ml reactions containing 1 x final concentration TaqMan Universal Master Mix (ABI part number 4304437), 18 mM of each primer and 5 mM probe and took place in a 384-well optical PCR plate.
  • Amplification and detection of DNA was performed with the ABI 7900HT Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems) using the reaction conditions: 50oC for 2 minutes, 95oC for 10 minutes and 40 cycles of 95°C for 15 seconds and 60°C for 1 minute. Cycle thresholding was calculated using the automated settings for SDS 2.2 (Applied Biosystems). Primer and probe sequences for each assay are as follows: Fusobacteria forward primer, 5'
  • CAACCATTACTTTAACTCTACCATGTTCA 3' (SEQ ID NO: 1); Fusobacteria reverse primer, 5' GTTGACTTTACAGAAGGAGATTATGTAAAAATC 3' (SEQ ID NO: 2); Fusobacteria FAM probe, 5' GTTGACTTTACAGAAGGAGATTATGTAAAAATC 3' (SEQ ID NO: 3); PGT forward primer, 5' ATCCCCAAAGCACCTGGT TT 3' (SEQ ID NO: 4); PGT reverse primer, 5' AGAGGCCAAGATAGTCCTGGTAA 3' (SEQ ID NO: 5); PGT FAM probe, 5' CCATCCATGTCCTCATCTC 3 ' (SEQ ID NO: 6).
  • the entire qPCR experiment was performed a second time using the same samples and methods as outlined above, for the purpose of replication, and very similar results were obtained.
  • the initial metagenomics screen described above involved interrogation of expressed genes, however, once we established F. nucleatum as a candidate pathogen, we switched to analysis of gDNA because a larger amount of high quality DNA than RNA was obtainable from the frozen tissue sections.
  • EXAMPLE 3 Isolation, Culture and Whole Renome sequencing of a representative strain of F. nucleatum
  • frozen tumour sections were thawed and immediately placed into 500 ml of pre-reduced phosphate buffered saline, and the tissue agitated and gently broken up using a pipette fitted with a sterile, wide-bore, plugged tip. 100 ml aliquots of this suspension were directly spread onto pre-reduced fastidious anaerobe agar (FAA) plates supplemented with 5% defibrinated sheep blood (DSB), and incubated for 10 days in a humidified anaerobe chamber (Ruskinn Bug Box). Plates were inspected every 2 days for growth, and all colonies were picked and streak-purified on further pre-reduced
  • FAA fastidious anaerobe agar
  • DSB defibrinated sheep blood
  • HMW high molecular weight
  • Fusobacterium genomic DNA was sonicated and size fractions between 175 to 200 bp and 400 to 450 bp were isolated following PAGE.
  • WGSS Paired- end Illumina libraries were prepared from each size fraction as described previously with the following modifications: the final PCR amplification was increased to 15 cycles and contained the standard Illumina PE1 PCR primer and an indexed PE2 primer as detailed above for RNA-Seq library construction.
  • a total of 92.0M paired 100 nt reads were obtained from a single lane of the Illumina HiSeq instrument. After quality filtering, keeping only pairs with an average base quality of Q30 or higher, 64.8M paired reads were aligned with novoalign (www.novocraft.com; -o SAM -r A -R 0) onto the F.
  • nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586 GenBank accession NC 003454.1
  • Fusobacterium sp. 3_1_36A2 genome sequences HMP accessions GG698790- GG698801, respectively. Paired read alignments were processed using custom PERL scripts that tracked genome sequence coverage, depth of coverage and average sequence identity of mapped pairs. Annotation of strain sp. 3_1_36A2 regions devoid of read alignments was performed by extracting the coordinates of alignment gaps lkbp or larger and mining the HMP GenBank-format file for existing gene annotations
  • the contigs were annotated using BLASTX (v2.2.25), reporting the best hit for each high- scoring pairs and manually inspecting each alignment.
  • Fusobacterium sp. 3_1_36A2 genome assembly was aligned onto the type strain using cross match (www.phrap.org; -minmatch 29 -minscore 59 -masklevel 101) and ordered/oriented based on the latter. Fusobacterium tumour isolate contigs were in turn aligned onto the reordered Fusobacterium sp. 3 1 36A2 HMP genome assembly and ordered/oriented according to that genome sequence, using the same cross match parameters. Three-way cross match alignments between the ordered Fusobacterium genomes were performed and plotted using hive plots (www.hiveplot.com). [0064] We obtained an excessive number (64,819,156) of quality filtered paired 100 nt reads.
  • Fusobacterium sp. 3 1 36A2 assembly respectively and ordered/oriented based on the highest identity to the latter sequence.
  • Three-way cross_match (www.phrap.org) alignments between each Fusobacterium genomes were performed and represented visually using hive plots (www.hiveplot.com).
  • Sequence similarity and synteny was highest between CC53 and sp. 3_1_36A2, , as evidenced by a greater density of high similarity sequence matches between them, relative to relative to ATCC 25586, and shared patterns of inversions compared to this reference strain.
  • Three regions of sequences present in sp. 3_1_36A2 but absent from CC53 were apparent as conspicuous gaps on the sp. 3_1_36A2 axis.
  • YP_003945856 Hemagglutination Paenibacillus 1 82.6 458 733 activity domain protein polymyxa SC2
  • nucleatum types strain ATCC 25586 genome as reference.
  • PCR 1 ng of extracted gDNA was used as template, Phusion polymerase (NEB) and buffers were used for the PCR. Cycling conditions were as follows: 94°C for 2 minutes, then 94°C 30 seconds, 67°C 30 seconds, 72°C 30 seconds for 30cycles. PCR products were purified using Ampure magnetic beads. Sequencing reactions were done using BigDye 3.1 and reaction products were run on AB 3730x1. Phred quality 30 trimmed sequences were used in a BLASTN alignment against the HMP reference genome data, keeping the hit with the highest sequence identity. [0070] Sanger sequences from these amplicons comprised 68,694 total base pairs and each aligned with highest sequence similarity (93-100%) to one of the various
  • EXAMPLE 4 CC53 demonstrates invasiveness in human colonic epithelial cells.
  • CC53 would demonstrate invasiveness in human colonic epithelial cells.
  • Caco-2 cells were grown on glass coverslips, infected with CC53 culture (at a multiplicity of infection of 100: 1), and then differentially stained with anti- Fusobacterium antibodies conjugated to different fluorophores before and after Caco-2 cell permeabilization.
  • Caco-2 cell invasion assays with CC53 were carried out in triplicate using a differential staining immunofluorescence procedure. Briefly, bacterial cultures were grown to late log phase according to pre-determined growth-curve data, and normalized for cell number using McFarland standards. Caco-2 cells were grown to 80% confluence on glass coverslips in 24-well plates and infected at a multiplicity of infection of 100: 1 (bacterial cells :intestinal cells). Infected cells were maintained at 37°C, 5% C02 for 4 hours following infection, after which time cells were washed with PBS to remove non-adherent bacteria, and then fixed with 2.5% paraformaldehyde, and blocked in 10% (v/v) normal goat serum.
  • the differential staining method allows for delineation between bacteria that have penetrated the host cells (labeled for actin) to reside within them, and bacteria present on the outside of the cell.
  • bacteria external to the host cell were labeled with both Cy3 and Alexa 350, whereas bacteria inside the cells were labeled with Cy3 only (appearing only orange when channels were merged).
  • Cy3 only appearing only orange when channels were merged.
  • Each invasion assay was carried out on 3 separate occasions using freshly prepared Caco-2 cells and bacterial inocula.
  • CC53 shows a very long, fine, thread-like cell morphology and, in our study, the long, thread-like cells appear to penetrate host cells pole-first and demonstrate a very long, flexible cell morphology. This assay demonstrated that CC53 was invasive.
  • Fusobacterial brain abscess a review of five cases and an analysis of possible
  • Acute appendicitis is characterised by local invasion with Fusobacterium nucleatum/necrophorum. Gut 60: 34-40.

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Abstract

Fusobacterium is a genus of gram-negative, filamentous, anaerobic bacteria found as normal flora in the mouth and large bowel, and often in necrotic tissue. A comparison of microbial ribonucleic acids (RNA) between colorectal carcinoma (CRC) tissue and adjacent normal control tissue found the over-representation of F. nucleatum in CRC tissue. RNA abundance was measured by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplifying RNA from the tissue, constructing libraries, sequencing the RNA in the libraries, pairing sequences from CRC and normal tissue, and quantifying RNA abundance. Detection of Fusobacterium in a gastrointestinal sample is indicative of gastrointestinal cancer.

Description

DETECTION OF FUSOBACTERIUM IN A GASTROINTESTINAL SAMPLE
TO DIAGNOSE GASTROINTESTINAL CANCER
FIELD OF INVENTION
[0001] The present invention provides, in part, methods for diagnosis or treatment of gastrointestinal cancers.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Cancers of the gastrointestinal tract represent a significant percentage of all cancer related deaths, and include gastric cancer, colorectal and esophageal cancers. Colorectal carcinoma (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer deaths, responsible for
approximately 655,000 deaths per year worldwide (World Health Organization fact sheet #297, February 2009). CRC is also one of the first and best genetically characterized cancers in which specific somatic mutations on oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes associated with progression from adenomatous lesions (polyps) to invasive carcinoma have been identified (Vogelstein et al. 1988). Inflammation has been recognized as a risk factor for CRC (McLean et al. 201 1 , Wu et al. 2009).
[0003] Infectious agents have been implicated in the development of some cancers (Herrera LA et al. 2005). Among these, Human Papilloma Virus (cervical cancer), Hepatitis B and C virus (liver cancer), and Helicobacter pylori (gastric cancer) alone are responsible for an estimated 15% of the global cancer burden, based on strength of the association and prevalence of infection (Parkin et al. 2006).
[0004] Fusobacterium nucleatum is an invasive (Han et al. 2000, Swidsinski et al. 201 1), adherent (Weiss et al. 2000) and pro-inflammatory (Peyret-Lacombe et al. 2009,
Krisanaprakornkit et al. 2000) anaerobic bacterium. It is common in dental plaque (Bolstad et al. 1996, Ximenez-Fyvie et al. 2000) and there is a well established association between F. nucleatum and periodontitis (Signat et al. 201 1). Anecdotally, F. nucleatum has been implicated in cerebral abscesses (Kai et al. 2008) and pericarditis (Han et al. 2003) and it is one of the Fusobacterium species implicated in Lemierre's syndrome, a rare form of thrombophlebitis (Weeks et al. 2010). Various Fusobacteria, including F. nucleatum, have been implicated in acute appendicitis, where they have been found by
immunohistochemistry (IHC) as epithelial and submucosal infiltrates that correlate positively with severity of disease (Swidsinski et al. 201 1 ). When isolated from human intestinal biopsy material, F. nucleatum has been found to be more readily culturable from patients with gastrointestinal (GI) disease than healthy controls, and the strains grown from inflamed biopsy tissue appeared to exhibit a more invasive phenotype (Strauss et al. 2008, Strauss et al. 201 1).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] The present invention provides, in part, methods for diagnosis or treatment of gastrointestinal cancers.
[0006] In one aspect, the invention provides a method for prognosing or diagnosing a gastrointestinal cancer in a subject, by providing a sample from the subject; and detecting a Fusobacterium sp. in the sample, where a positive detection of the Fusobacterium sp. indicates a prognosis or diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer. [0007] In some embodiments, the detection may include contacting the sample with an antibody that specifically binds a Fusobacterium sp. antigen or a nucleotide sequence that hybridizes to a Fusobacterium sp. nucleotide sequence, where the specific binding of the antibody to the Fusobacterium sp. antigen or the hybridization of the nucleotide sequence to the Fusobacterium sp. nucleotide sequence indicates a prognosis or diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer.
[0008] The Fusobacterium sp. antigen or nucleotide sequence may be selected from the group consisting of one or more of the polypeptides descried herein.
[0009] The gastrointestinal cancer may be a colorectal carcinoma.
[0010] The subject may have or may be suspected of having chronic inflammatory bowel disease. The subject may be a human. [0011] The sample may be a colon sample, a rectal sample, a stool sample, an adenomatous lesion or polyp, or may be derived from an abscess.
[0012] The Fusobacterium sp. may be a F. nucleatum.
[0013] In alternative aspects, the invention provides a method of screening for a compound for treating a gastrointestinal cancer, by providing a test compound; and determining whether the test compound inhibits the growth or activity of a Fusobacterium sp. , where a compound that inhibits the growth or activity of the Fusobacterium sp. is a candidate compound for treating a gastrointestinal cancer.
[0014] In alternative aspects, the invention provides a method of treating a gastrointestinal cancer, by administering a compound or composition that induces an immunological response against a Fusobacterium sp. to a subject diagnosed with or suspected of having a gastrointestinal cancer.
[0015] This summary of the invention does not necessarily describe all features of the invention. Further aspects of the invention will become apparent from consideration of the ensuing description. A person skilled in the art will realise that other embodiments of the invention are possible and that the details of the invention can be modified in a number of respects, all without departing from the inventive concept. Thus, the following drawings, descriptions and examples are to be regarded as illustrative in nature and not restrictive.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS [0016] These and other features of the invention will become more apparent from the following description in which reference is made to the appended drawings wherein:
[0017] FIGURE 1 is a schematic diagram showing a strategy for detection of candidate infectious agents;
[0018] FIGURE 2 shows the detection of HVP DNA sequences in normal and tumour samples;
[0019] FIGURE 3A shows the detection of Fusobacterium DNA sequences; [0020] FIGURE 3B shows the number of sequencing read pairs that match known microbial genomes for the 25 most abundant genomes.
[0021] FIGURE 4A shows the relative abundance of Fusobacterium in tumour versus normal colorectal carcinoma biopsies. Relative amounts of Fusobacterium DNA were determined between tumour and matched normal biopsies in 99 subjects, using
quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). The cycle threshold (Ct) values for the normal samples had a Ct range of 25.5 to 40 and the Ct range for the tumour samples was between 21.4 to 40. Data shown are mean values from two independent experiments. Fusobacterium load, as determined by qPCR, was found to be significantly higher in the tumour samples versus the matched control samples (two-tailed ratio t-test (p = 2.52 x 10- 6)).
[0022] FIGURE 4B shows the detection of Fusobacterium DNA sequences by qPCR in cohort of 90 patients using matched normal and tumor samples.
[0023] FIGURES 5A-B show the frequency of metastasis increases with higher
Fusobacterium abundance in tumour biopsies. Patients with 5X or greater Fusobacterium in their tumour biopsies versus matched normal tissue were compared to those patients with less than 5X relative amounts of Fusobacterium. A significantly higher number of patients from the high Fusobacterium group (A) had more tumour spreading in their lymph nodes as measured by their surgical TNM scores than the low Fusobacterium group (B) (one-tailed Fisher's exact test p-value = 0.0035).
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0024] The present invention provides, in part, methods for diagnosis or treatment of gastrointestinal cancers by detection of Fusobacterium. We disclose herein that
Fusobacterium nucleatum, a known pathogen associated previously with periodontal disease, is associated with gastrointestinal cancer. We also demonstrate that a
Fusobacterium isolated from CRC tumour samples is invasive.
[0025] More specifically, we used a metagenomics approach (Weber et al. 2002, Moore et al. 2011) to identify microbial sequence signatures in diseases that have a possible or suspected infectious etiology. There are variations on the method, but the basic approach involves shotgun sequencing bulk DNA or RNA isolated from disease tissue,
computational subtraction of all sequence reads recognized as human, and comparison of the residual reads to databases of known microbial sequences in order to identify microbial species present in the initial specimen. The method is complementary to traditional culture and histolology based protocols and new, massively parallel sequencing technologies impart high sensitivity. Such methods are described in part in, for example, Flicek et al. 201 1, Li and Durbin 2010, Moore et al. 201 1, etc.
[0026] More specifically, we screened colorectal carcinoma and matched normal tissue specimens using RNA-Seq, followed by host sequence subtractions, and found marked over-representation of F. nucleatum sequences in tumours relative to control specimens. We obtained a Fusobacterium isolate from a frozen tumour specimen and this showed highest sequence similarity to a gut mucosa isolate and was confirmed to be invasive. We verified overabundance of Fusobacterium sequences in tumour versus matched normal control tissue by quantitative PCR analysis from a total of 99 subjects (p=2.5E-6) and observed a positive association with lymph node metastasis.
[0027] This over-representation of F. nucleatum in colorectal tumour specimens was largely unexpected, given that it is generally regarded as an oral pathogen, and is not an abundant constituent of the normal gut microbiota (Qin, et al. 2010). [0028] By a "cancer" or "neoplasm" is meant any unwanted growth of cells serving no physiological function. In general, a cell of a neoplasm has been released from its normal cell division control, i.e., a cell whose growth is not regulated by the ordinary biochemical and physical influences in the cellular environment. In most cases, a neoplastic cell proliferates to form a clone of cells which are either benign or malignant. Examples of cancers or neoplasms include, without limitation, transformed and immortalized cells, tumours, and carcinomas such as breast cell carcinomas and prostate carcinomas. The term cancer includes cell growths that are technically benign but which carry the risk of becoming malignant i.e. a "malignancy." By "malignancy" is meant an abnormal growth of any cell type or tissue. The term malignancy includes cell growths that are technically benign but which carry the risk of becoming malignant. This term also includes any cancer, carcinoma, neoplasm, neoplasia, or tumor. Identification and classification of types and stages of cancers may be performed by using for example information provided by the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program of the National Cancer Institute.
[0029] By "gastrointestinal" or "GI" cancer or carcinoma is meant a malignancy or neoplasm of the gastrointestinal tract. GI cancers can include cancers of the upper GI tract such as, esophagus (e.g., squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma), or stomach (e.g., gastric carcinoma, signet ring cell carcinoma, gastric lymphoma) or of the lower GI tract such as, small intestine (e.g., duodenal cancer/adenocarcinoma), colon rectum (e.g., colorectal polyps/Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, juvenile polyposis syndrome, familial adenomatous polyposis/Gardner's syndrome, Cronkhite-Canada syndrome, familial adenomatous polyposis, hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer, etc.), anus (e.g., squamous cell carcinoma). [0030] In some embodiments, the methods and compounds described or referenced herein may pertain to a condition or a cancer that is "related" to a GI cancer. Such cancers can include, for example, liver cancer or pancreatic cancer, or a cancer of a tissue or organ to which a colorectal tumour or cell has spread by metastasis. In alternative embodiments, conditions such as abscesses in other tissues, such as liver, are included. [0031 ] By "Fusobacterium" is meant a genus of gram-negative, anaerobic, rod-shaped bacteria found as normal flora in the mouth and large bowel and often in necrotic tissue (Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc.). Some Fusobacterium species are pathogenic to humans (Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 8th edition. © 2009, Elsevier). Fusobacterium species include F. gonidiaformans and F. mortiferum (occurring in respiratory, urogenital, and gastrointestinal infections); F. necrophorum (occurring in disseminated infections involving necrotic lesions, abscesses, and bacteremia), F.
naviforme, F. russii, and F. varium (occurring in abscesses and other infections), F.
fusiforme (found in cavities of humans and other animals, and sometimes associated with Vincent's angina), F. polymorphum, F. equinum, F. nodosus, F. nucleatum, etc. (Miller- Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc.; Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 8th edition. © 2009, Elsevier). In some embodiments, a Fusobacterium species includes a Fusobacterium sp. strain 3_1_36A2, Fusobacterium sp. strain 3_1_27, Fusobacterium sp. strain 7_1 , Fusobacterium sp. strain 4_1_13, Fusobacterium sp. strain Dl 1,
Fusobacterium sp. strain 3 1 33, F. gonidiaformans ATCC 25563, Fusobacterium sp. strain 1_1_41FAA, etc.
[0032] By "Fusobacterium nucleatum" or "F. nucleatum''' is meant an invasive, adherent and pro-inflammatory anaerobic bacterium. In some embodiments, a F. nucleatum includes a F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586, F. nucleatum subsp.
polymorphum ATCC 10953, Fusobacterium sp. strain 3_1_36A2, F. nucleatum CC53, Fusobacterium sp. strain 3_1_27, F. nucleatum subsp. vincentii ATCC 49256,
Fusobacterium sp. strain 7_1, Fusobacterium sp. strain 4 1 13, Fusobacterium sp. strain Dl 1, F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 23726, Fusobacterium sp. strain 3_1_33, Fusobacterium sp. strain 1_1_41FAA, etc.
[0033] In some embodiments, the F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586 has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences referenced in GenBank Accession No. AE009951 or to NC_003454.1 or a fragment or variant thereof. In some embodiments, the F. nucleatum subsp. polymorphum ATCC 10953 has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences referenced in GenBank Accession No. NZ_CM000440, or a fragment or variant thereof. In some embodiments, the Fusobacterium sp. strain 3 1 36A2 has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences referenced in GenBank Accession Nos. ACPUOl 000001 to ACPUOl 000051 , or GG698790-GG698801 , or a fragment thereof. In some embodiments, a Fusobacterium sequence according to the invention has a nucleic acid sequence substantially identical to one or more of the sequences listed in Table 4, or encodes a polypeptide as described in Table 4, or other sequences described or referenced herein, or fragments or variants thereof. [0034] The terms "nucleic acid" or "nucleic acid molecule" encompass both RNA (plus and minus strands) and DNA, including cDNA, genomic DNA (gDNA), and synthetic (e.g., chemically synthesized) DNA. The nucleic acid may be double-stranded or single- stranded. Where single-stranded, the nucleic acid may be the sense strand or the antisense strand. A nucleic acid molecule may be any chain of two or more covalently bonded nucleotides, including naturally occurring or non-naturally occurring nucleotides, or nucleotide analogs or derivatives. By "RNA" is meant a sequence of two or more covalently bonded, naturally occurring or modified ribonucleotides. One example of a modified RNA included within this term is phosphorothioate RNA. By "DNA" is meant a sequence of two or more covalently bonded, naturally occurring or modified
deoxyribonucleo tides. By "cDNA" is meant complementary or copy DNA produced from an RNA template by the action of RNA-dependent DNA polymerase (reverse
transcriptase). Thus a "cDNA clone" means a duplex DNA sequence complementary to an RNA molecule of interest, carried in a cloning vector. By "complementary" is meant that two nucleic acids, e.g., DNA or RNA, contain a sufficient number of nucleotides which are capable of forming Watson-Crick base pairs to produce a region of double- strandedness between the two nucleic acids. Thus, adenine in one strand of DNA or RNA pairs with thymine in an opposing complementary DNA strand or with uracil in an opposing complementary RNA strand. It will be understood that each nucleotide in a nucleic acid molecule need not form a matched Watson-Crick base pair with a nucleotide in an opposing complementary strand to form a duplex. A nucleic acid molecule is "complementary" to another nucleic acid molecule if it hybridizes, under conditions of high stringency, with the second nucleic acid molecule.
[0035] A "substantially identical" sequence is an amino acid or nucleotide sequence that differs from a reference sequence only by one or more conservative substitutions, as discussed herein, or by one or more non-conservative substitutions, deletions, or insertions located at positions of the sequence that do not destroy the biological function of the amino acid or nucleic acid molecule. Such a sequence can be any value from 50% to 99%, or more generally at least 50% 55% or 60%, or at least 65%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, or 95%, or as much as 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% identical when optimally aligned at the amino acid or nucleotide level to the sequence used for comparison using, for example, the Align Program (Myers and Miller, CABIOS, 1989, 4: 1 1-17) or FASTA. For polypeptides, the length of comparison sequences may be at least 2, 5, 10, or 15 amino acids, or at least 20, 25, or 30 amino acids. In alternate embodiments, the length of comparison sequences may be at least 35, 40, or 50 amino acids, or over 60, 80, or 100 amino acids. For nucleic acid molecules, the length of comparison sequences may be at least 5, 10, 15, 20, or 25 nucleotides, or at least 30, 40, or 50 nucleotides. In alternate embodiments, the length of comparison sequences may be at least 60, 70, 80, or 90 nucleotides, or over 100, 200, or 500 nucleotides. Sequence identity can be readily measured using publicly available sequence analysis software (e.g., Sequence Analysis Software Package of the Genetics Computer Group, University of Wisconsin Biotechnology Center, 1710 University
Avenue, Madison, Wis. 53705, or BLAST software available from the National Library of Medicine, or as described herein). Examples of useful software include the programs Pile- up and PrettyBox. Such software matches similar sequences by assigning degrees of homology to various substitutions, deletions, substitutions, and other modifications.
[0036] Alternatively, or additionally, two nucleic acid sequences may be "substantially identical" if they hybridize under high stringency conditions. In some embodiments, high stringency conditions are, for example, conditions that allow hybridization comparable with the hybridization that occurs using a DNA probe of at least 500 nucleotides in length, in a buffer containing 0.5 M NaHP04, pH 7.2, 7% SDS, 1 mM EDTA, and 1% BSA
(fraction V), at a temperature of 65°C, or a buffer containing 48% formamide, 4.8x SSC, 0.2 M Tris-Cl, pH 7.6, lx Denhardt's solution, 10% dextran sulfate, and 0.1% SDS, at a temperature of 42°C. (These are typical conditions for high stringency northern or
Southern hybridizations.) Hybridizations may be carried out over a period of about 20 to 30 minutes, or about 2 to 6 hours, or about 10 to 15 hours, or over 24 hours or more. High stringency hybridization is also relied upon for the success of numerous techniques routinely performed by molecular biologists, such as high stringency PCR, DNA sequencing, single strand conformational polymorphism analysis, and in situ hybridization. In contrast to northern and Southern hybridizations, these techniques are usually performed with relatively short probes (e.g., usually about 16 nucleotides or longer for PCR or sequencing and about 40 nucleotides or longer for in situ hybridization). The high stringency conditions used in these techniques are well known to those skilled in the art of molecular biology, and examples of them can be found, for example, in Ausubel et al., Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, John Wiley & Sons, New York, N.Y., 1998, which is hereby incorporated by reference. A nucleic acid sequence may be detectably labelled.
[0037] Substantially identical sequences may for example be sequences that are substantially identical to the Fusobacterium species sequences described or referenced herein, or fragments or variants thereof. [0038] An antibody "specifically binds" an antigen when it recognises and binds the antigen, for example, an antigen from a Fusobacterium, such as a F. nucleatum, but does not substantially recognise and bind other molecules in a sample, for example, an antigen from a different species. Such an antibody has, for example, an affinity for the antigen which is at least 10, 100, 1000 or 10000 times greater than the affinity of the antibody for another reference molecule in a sample. An antibody may be detectably labelled.
[0039] By "detectably labelled" is meant any means for marking and identifying the presence of a molecule, e.g., an oligonucleotide probe or primer, a gene or fragment thereof, or a cDNA molecule. Methods for detectably-labelling a molecule are well known in the art and include, without limitation, radioactive labelling (e.g., with an isotope such
32 35
as P or S) and nonradioactive labelling such as, enzymatic labelling (for example, using horseradish peroxidase or alkaline phosphatase), chemiluminescent labeling, fluorescent labeling (for example, using fluorescein), bioluminescent labeling, or antibody detection of a ligand attached to the probe. Also included in this definition is a molecule that is detectably labeled by an indirect means, for example, a molecule that is bound with a first moiety (such as biotin) that is, in turn, bound to a second moiety that may be observed or assayed (such as fluorescein-labeled streptavidin). Labels also include digoxigenin, luciferases, and aequorin.
[0040] A "sample" can be any organ, tissue, cell, or cell extract isolated from a subject, such as a sample isolated from a mammal having a gastrointestinal cancer or suspected of having a gastrointestinal cancer. For example, a sample can include, without limitation, cells or tissue (e.g., from a biopsy or autopsy) from any part of the gastrointestinal tract (including without limitation, colon, stomach, stool, anus, rectum, duodenum), a gastrointestinal cell lysate, cell culture or culture medium, or any other specimen, or any extract thereof, obtained from a patient (human or animal), test subject, or experimental animal. A sample may also include, without limitation, products produced in cell culture by normal or transformed cells (e.g., via recombinant DNA or monoclonal antibody technology). A sample may also include, without limitation, any organ, tissue, cell, or cell extract isolated from a non-mammalian subject, such as an insect or a worm. A "sample" may also be a cell or cell line created under experimental conditions, that is not directly isolated from a subject. A sample can also be cell-free, artificially derived or synthesised. A sample may be from a gastrointestinal cell or tissue known to be cancerous, suspected of being cancerous, or believed not be cancerous (e.g., normal or control). In some embodiments, an oral sample is specifically excluded. [0041] A "subject" may be a human, non-human primate, rat, mouse, cow, horse, pig, sheep, goat, dog, cat, etc. The subject may be a clinical patient, a clinical trial volunteer, an experimental animal, etc. The subject may be suspected of having or at risk for having a GI cancer or related condition or cancer, be diagnosed with a GI cancer or related condition or cancer, or be a control subject that is confirmed to not have a GI cancer or related condition or cancer. Diagnostic methods for GI cancer or related condition or cancer and the clinical delineation of such diagnoses are known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
[0042] The association of an invasive Fusobacterium with a GI cancer, such as CRC, permits the use of this association for screening methods. Such screens may be performed using assays as described herein or known in the art.
[0043] In alternative aspects, a GI cancer or related condition or cancer may be treated by administering an effective amount of a compound (e.g., an antibiotic) or a composition (e.g., a vaccine) effective against a Fusobacterium, such as a F. nucleatum. In some embodiments, a vaccine may include a Fusobacterium or antigen thereof (e.g., a polypeptide encoded by one or more of the Fusobacterium sequences described or referenced herein, or known in the art, or a whole bacterium, such as a killed
Fusobacterium bacterin). In the case of vaccine formulations, an immunogenically effective amount of a compound of the invention can be provided, alone or in combination with other compounds, with an immunological adjuvant, for example, Freund's incomplete adjuvant, dimethyldioctadecylammonium hydroxide, or aluminum hydroxide. The compound may also be linked with a carrier molecule, such as bovine serum albumin or keyhole limpet hemocyanin to enhance immunogenicity.
[0044] In alternative embodiments, such compounds, compositions or vaccines be combined with more traditional and existing therapies for GI cancer or related condition or cancer.
[0045] An "effective amount" includes a therapeutically effective amount or a
prophylactically effective amount. A "therapeutically effective amount" refers to an amount effective, at dosages and for periods of time necessary, to achieve the desired therapeutic result, such as treatment of a GI cancer or related condition or cancer. A therapeutically effective amount of a compound may vary according to factors such as the disease state, age, sex, and weight of the individual, and the ability of the compound to elicit a desired response in the individual. Dosage regimens may be adjusted to provide the optimum therapeutic response. A therapeutically effective amount is also one in which any toxic or detrimental effects of the compound are outweighed by the therapeutically beneficial effects. A "prophylactically effective amount" refers to an amount effective, at dosages and for periods of time necessary, to achieve the desired prophylactic result, such prophlaxis of a GI cancer or related condition or cancer. Typically, a prophylactic dose is used in subjects prior to or at an earlier stage of disease, so that a prophylactically effective amount may be less than a therapeutically effective amount.
EXAMPLE 1 : Fusobacterium nucleatum infection is prevalent in human colorectal carcinoma [0046] Deep transcriptome sequencing of tumour/normal specimens from 12 subjects was performed using Illumina platform at the Genome Sciences Center at the BC Cancer Agency, as outlined in Fig. 1. Validation studies were performed using qPCR to test matched and normal pairs of specimens from colorectal carcinoma subjects. HPV virus was detected in one of the twelve patients (Fig. 2). Fusobacterium was detected in four of the twelve patient samples (Fig. 3A).
[0047] More specifically, total RNA was isolated from frozen sections of eleven matched pairs of CRC and adjacent normal tissue specimens. RNA was purified by host ribosomal sequence depletion, rather than poly-A selection, in order to retain non-polyadenylated sequences of potential microbial origin. In our screen, we analyzed RNA rather than DNA in order to detect active, transcribing microorganisms and to allow for the detection of RNA viruses that may be present.
[0048] For all cases, fresh CRC samples were obtained with informed consent by the BC Cancer Agency Tumour Tissue Repository (BCCA-TTR), which operates as a dedicated biobank with approval from the University of British Columbia-British Columbia Cancer Agency Research Ethics Board (BCCA REB). The BCCA-TTR platform are governed by Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) that meet or exceed the recommendations of international best practice guidelines for repositories (NCI Office of Biorepositories and Biospecimen Research. NCI Best Practices for Biospecimen Resources. 2007). Specimens are handled with very close attention to maintaining integrity and isolation. Overall average collection time (time from removal from surgical field to cryopreservation in liquid nitrogen) for all colorectal cases in the BCCA-TTR is 31 min. For this study, biospecimens were held briefly at -20°C during frozen sectioning, using 100% ethanol to clean the blade between all samples. Clinical-pathological and outcomes data was obtained from the BC Cancer Agency clinical chart including tumour features reported according to the American College of Pathologists criteria and 'Protocol for examination of specimens from patients with primary carcinoma of the colon and rectum'. This included histological features indicative of inflammatory and immune response (lymphoid and myeloid cell infiltrates) which were assessed as none, mild-moderate, or marked using semi- quantitative scoring as well as the percent area of tumour involved by necrosis, by a pathologist in a representative tumour cross section.
[0049] Illumina RNASeq libraries were constructed, barcoded, and pooled, and 2 lanes of paired end sequencing data were obtained using the Illumina GAIIx platform. Reads were filtered for base quality and low complexity, then aligned pairwise to human rRNA and cDNA and genome (hgl 8) reference sequences using Burrows-Wheeler Aligner (BWA). Aligned reads were removed from the data set, leaving 34.9M pairs (Table 1).
Table 1. Host sequence subtraction RNA-seq data from eleven colorectal carcinoma and matched normal specimens.
Control (mean +/- SD) Tumour (mean +/- SD)
Raw read pairs 2,222,539 +/- 355,530 2,175,063 +/- 439,279
Filtered read pairs1 349,354 +/- 212,209 339,935 +/- 182,207
Read pairs matching
bacterial or viral
genomes2 17,154 +/- 22,837 15,681 +/- 29,568
Distinct bacterial or viral
genome matches 546 544
1. Read pairs remaining after removal of low quality reads and reads matching human RNA, transcriptome or genome reference sequences.
2. Unambiguous alignments where the best match for each mate pair is to the same accession.
[0050] These residual read pairs were then used to search a custom database containing accessions for all Refseq bacterial and viral genomes, using Novoalign
(http://novocraft.com), which is a slower but more permissive aligner than BWA. Our analysis was alignment based, because the abundance of candidate organisms can be inferred more directly from alignments than from de novo assemblies. For accuracy, we tallied only unambiguous alignments where the best match to both the forward and reverse mate pair was to the same genome accession.
[0051] More specifically, eleven colorectal tumour samples and eleven matched normal samples were processed, using an RNeasy Plus mini kit (Qiagen) to purify total RNA or an AllPrep DNA/RNA mini kit (Qiagen) to purify both DNA and RNA. RNA quality and concentration was assessed using Agilent Bioanalyzer 2000 RNA Nanochips. Ribosomal RNAs were depleted from lmg of total RNA using the manufacturer's protocol for the RiboMinus Eukaryote Kit for RNA-Seq (Invitrogen). Depletion was assessed using Agilent Bioanalyzer 2000 RNA Nanochips. All samples were found to have < 10% residual ribosomal RNA contamination and were processed as described previously (Shah et al. 2009, Morin et al. 2010) for the construction of Illumina libraries, with the following modifications: Each paired-end library was PCR amplified for 15 cycles using the standard Illumina PE1 PCR primer plus one of 12 modified PE2 primers, each including a unique six base insertion as an index sequence. Libraries prepared using indexed primers were then combined in pools of 11 each (one tumour pool, one control pool) gel purified, and then sequenced on the Illumina GAIIx platform. One lane of 75 bp paired end sequence was obtained for each of the two pools.
[0052] Paired-end sequence reads from indexed tumour and adjacent normal sample libraries were processed. Briefly, corresponding human RNA-Seq libraries were aligned with BWA (version 0.5.4 [sample -o 1000, default options] sequentially against human rRNA , cDNA and genome reference sequences. Pairs aligning logically, or containing reads having either an average base quality below phred 20 (Ewing et al. 1998) and/or more than 20 consecutive homopolymeric bases were subtracted from the original data. Read pairs that remained unaligned to any of the human sequence databases were used to interrogate a custom-built sequence collection of well-characterized bacterial and viral genes and genomes using novoalign (version 2.05.20 [-o SAM -r A -R 0, default options]). Alignments were run on a single 3 GHz 8 CPU Intel(R) Xeon(R) 64-bit 61GB RAM computer running CentOS release 5.4. Multiplexed reads from the tumour and normal libraries were deconvoluted according to sequence tags (i.e., barcodes) and the number of read pairs that mapped unambiguously to a single location were tallied for each indexed sample and normalized against the sample read count. Ultimately, read pair count was reported for each GenBank accession in our microbial genome database, sorted in decreasing order by the sum of unambiguous pairs and PERL scripts were developed to mine these data. Read counts were graphically visualized first by clustering common accession reads using UPGMA (Sokal and Michener, 1958) and then displayed as a heat map (loglO scale) using the Mayday package (http://www-ps.informatik.uni- tuebingen.de/mayday/wp/).
[0053] These alignments identified a total of 670 distinct genome accessions, representing 415 species. These were predominantly (97%) bacterial, although several herpes virus sequences were detectable at low levels, and one tumour showed overabundance (142 raw read pairs) of human papillomavirus type 107 (GenBank accession EF422221.1). A wide distribution of bacterial species abundance was apparent, with 30 species representing 95% of the sequence data, with twenty five of the most abundant genomes shown in Fig. 3B. Of the 670 distinct genome accessions hit, 63% were found in both tumour and normal specimens. Alignments specific to only tumour or only control specimens were due to rare sequences and, therefore, the representation in one group or the other may simply reflect sampling bias. Markedly disproportionate alignments between tumour and control were to the genome of F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum (ATCC 25586), a Gram-negative anaerobe. F. nucleatum was the organism with the highest number of hits overall (21% of all alignments) and nine of the eleven subjects showed at least two-fold higher read counts in tumour relative to corresponding control tissue.
[0054] The abundance of normalized bacterial read pairs ranged from zero to a maximum of 66,896. Differential abundance ranged from 0.1 to 256-fold, with a mean overabundance of 79-fold. The majority of the hits were to highly abundant F. nucleatum ribosomal transcripts but other non-ribosomal F. nucleatum gene products were also detected. More specifically, the distribution of hits from colorectal carcinoma NA-Seq data to the annotated F.nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586 genome showed 87% of the hits to be to LSU Ribosomal RNA 731537-734463, 9% of the hits to SSU Ribosomal RNA, 1% to LSU Ribosomal RNA 1073886-1076812, and the remaining 3% to other hits with more than 10 pairs (e.g., hypothetical protein FN0264, hypothetical protein FN1792, Asn tRNA, SSU Ribosomal RNA elongation factor Tu, pyruvate- flavodoxin
oxidoreductase, protein translation elongation factor G (EF-G), acyl carrier protein, hypothetical protein FN1314, SSU ribosomal protein S6P, CIpB protein, SSU ribosomal protein SI OP, putative cytoplasmic protein, preprotein translocase subunit SecY, 50S ribosomal protein L3 IP, 50S ribosomal protein L32P, 50S ribosomal protein L33P, protein translation initiation factor 1 , DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit alpha, 50S ribosomal protein L3P, 50S ribosomal protein L2, 50S ribosomal protein LI , flavodoxin FldA, hypothetical protein FN1309, 30S ribosomal protein S2, 30S ribosomal protein S4, major outer membrane protein, alkyl hydroperoxide reductase C22 protein, 50S ribosomal protein LI OP, Glu tRNA, 50S ribosomal protein L28P, HD superfamily hydrolase, hypothetical protein FN11 18, 5S ribosomal RNA, 50S ribosomal protein L21P, 50S ribosomal protein LI 3, thioredoxin, 50S ribosomal protein LI IP, 50S ribosomal protein LI 9, 60kDa chaperonin GROEL, transcription antitermination protein nusG, 50S ribosomal protein L18P, 50S ribosomal protein L217P, Leu tRNA, 50S ribosomal protein L4, 50S ribosomal protein LHP, carbon starvation protein A, SSU ribosomal protein S9P, DNA-directed RNA polymerase beta chain, 30S ribosomal protein SI 2, SSU ribosomal protein S3P). The total number of read pair hits was 80,1 18.
EXAMPLE 2: Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction Analysis
[0055] To explore further the observation of disparate F. nucleatum read counts between tumour and matched normal samples in our RNA-Seq data set, we developed a targeted quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) assay to interrogate additional samples. To design the qPCR primers and probe, we gathered the 51 ,677 read pairs from tumour sample 1 that matched F. nucleatum and performed a local de novo assembly using Short Sequence Assembly by K-mer Search and Extension (SSAKE; Warren et al. 2007) to obtain 861 total contigs, ranging in length from 100 to 1,433 bp.
[0056] More specifically, a custom TaqMan primer/probe set was designed to amplify F. nucleatum DNA that matched the contiguous sequence from the WTSS experiment. The cycle threshold (Ct) values for Fusobacterium were normalized to the amount of human biopsy gDNA in each reaction by using a primer/probe set for the reference gene, prostaglandin transporter (PGT), as previously described (Wilson et al. 2006). The reaction efficiency for the Fusobacterium assay and the PGT assay were found to be 97% and 98% respectively. The fold difference (2 -DDCt) in Fusobacterium abundance in tumour versus normal tissue was calculated by subtracting DCttumour from DCtnormal where DCt is the difference in threshold cycle number for the test and reference assay. Isolated biopsy DNA was quantified by PicoGreen Assay (invitrogen) on a Wallac Victor spectrophotometer (Perkin Elmer). Each reaction contained 5 ng DNA and was assayed in duplicate in 20 ml reactions containing 1 x final concentration TaqMan Universal Master Mix (ABI part number 4304437), 18 mM of each primer and 5 mM probe and took place in a 384-well optical PCR plate. Amplification and detection of DNA was performed with the ABI 7900HT Sequence Detection System (Applied Biosystems) using the reaction conditions: 50oC for 2 minutes, 95oC for 10 minutes and 40 cycles of 95°C for 15 seconds and 60°C for 1 minute. Cycle thresholding was calculated using the automated settings for SDS 2.2 (Applied Biosystems). Primer and probe sequences for each assay are as follows: Fusobacteria forward primer, 5'
CAACCATTACTTTAACTCTACCATGTTCA 3' (SEQ ID NO: 1); Fusobacteria reverse primer, 5' GTTGACTTTACAGAAGGAGATTATGTAAAAATC 3' (SEQ ID NO: 2); Fusobacteria FAM probe, 5' GTTGACTTTACAGAAGGAGATTATGTAAAAATC 3' (SEQ ID NO: 3); PGT forward primer, 5' ATCCCCAAAGCACCTGGT TT 3' (SEQ ID NO: 4); PGT reverse primer, 5' AGAGGCCAAGATAGTCCTGGTAA 3' (SEQ ID NO: 5); PGT FAM probe, 5' CCATCCATGTCCTCATCTC 3 ' (SEQ ID NO: 6). The entire qPCR experiment was performed a second time using the same samples and methods as outlined above, for the purpose of replication, and very similar results were obtained.
[0057] The majority of the 861 contigs matched genes encoding F. nucleatum ribosomal RNAs and proteins, but we also obtained 82 contigs that gave BLASTN alignments of 80% or greater sequence identity to other F. nucleatum protein coding genes, as shown in Table 2.
Table 2 contig926|sizel35]read3|covl .69 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl71383- 169923membrane-boundO-acyltransferase[ «5oZ)ac/er Mwnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AAACTTCAATTAGCATAGTTATGATTAAGGTAGAAATTTTTAGAAAAAATGGTAGTATAATAGG ATATAAAG (SEQ ID NO: 7) contig925|sizel41 |read5|cov2.51 ref_NC_003454.1_:c549922-
549746proteintranslocasesubunitSecE[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AAAACTCCAAGATAGATAGATACAAAAACAGTCATGGTTACAACCCATAGAGTAGAATGAATA ACTTCTGTTTTTGAAGGCCATTCAACTTTTGAGTATTCCATTTTAACCTTTTGAAATAAATTCAT GCTATCTCCTTTC (SEQ ID NO: 8) contig923|size78|read2|covl .69 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1725103-1725537neutrophil- activatingproteinA[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AG ATTTAAAGCTATACATG AATAC ACAGAATCATTATATGATTATTATTTTGAAAAATTTGATG AAGTTGCTGAAGAA (SEQ ID NO: 9) contig91 |sizel26|readl6|cov9.65 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1964996- 196519 OhypotheticalproteinFN 1309 [Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp .nucleatumATCC25586]
CAAAATTAAGGAGGATAAAAAATGGTTACAGGAGATATGAATATAATGGAAGCAGTTGAAAAA TACCCAGTAATAATTGAAGTTTTACAAAGAAATGGATTAGGCTGTGTAGGATGCATGATAGCT
(SEQ ID NO: 10) contig902|sizel l2|read3|cov2.04 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl673874-16730353-hydroxybutyryl- Co AdehydrogenasefFusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp .nucleatumATCC25 86]
TTTTAATCCTGATCCTATTTCAGTGATTGATAAAGAAGAAGTATTAGTTGCAAATATAGCTTCTG GTTTACAAATATCATCTAATTCTTTAAAAGTTTGTTTTTTAATTTCC (SEQ ID NO: 1 1) contig892[size91 |read2|covl .67 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1 128717-
1129361Uracilphosphoribosyltransferase[ «5o/)acie iw»!nucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] GGAGTTTATAGAAATGAAGAAACTCTTGAGCCTGTTTACTACTATTGTAAACTACCTACTGATA TAGCTTCAAGAAAGGTTATTCTTGTTG (SEQ ID NO: 12) contig891 |size80|read3|cov2.48 ref_NC_003454.1_:c l942765-1941737DNA- directedRNApolymerasesubunitalpha[Fusobacteriurnriucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ATTTTCATATCATGAGATTTATCATCAATAACTTGAATGTCCATTGGTTCATCAACCATTTCTTC TATATCATCTCTTAA (SEQ ID NO: 13) contig889|size l 34|read3|covl .70 ref_NC_003454.1_:441419- 444013 ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] ATAAAGATGGAAAAGATGATTCTCTTTTAAAACAAGAAGTTACGGCTGATGAAATTGCTGATAT AGTTTCAAGATGGACAGGTATCCCTGTATCAAAACTTACTGAAACTAAAAAAAAGAAAAAATG TTACATC (SEQ ID NO: 14) contig873|size202|read8|cov2.87 ref_NC_003454.1_:484759-485325
AlkylhydroperoxidereductaseC22protein[Fusobacteriunmucleaftimsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CACATTTGTGTGTCCAACTGAATTAGAAGATTTACAAGATCACTATGAAGATTTCAAAAAAGAA GGAGCAGAAGTTTATTCAGTTTCTTGTGACACTGCATTTGTTCACAAAGCATGGGCAGATCATT C AGAAAGAATTAAAAAAGTTACTTACCCAATGGTAGCTGACCCAACTGGATTCTTAGC AAGAGC TTTTGAAGTT (SEQ ID NO: 15) contig844|size86|read2|covl .77 ref_NC_003454.1_:441419- 444013ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
GGAAGAATAGTGGATTTTAAAAATACTTTAATTATAATGACATCTAATATAGGTAGCCATTTAA TACTTGAAGACCCTGCTCTTTC (SEQ ID NO: 16)
contig970|size85|read2|covl .79 ref NC_003454.1_:441419-
444013ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TAAAAAAGAAAAAATGTTACATCTTGAAGACCATATAAAAGAAAGAGTTAAAGGACAAGATGA AGCTGTTAAAGCTGTTGCAGAC (SEQ ID NO: 17) contig801 |size77|read2|covl .97 ref_NC_003454. I_:c77526- 76342elongationfactorTu[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CATATTCAATGTGAGCTGTATTGATAGTTATTCCTCTTTCTTTTTCTTCAGGAGCAGCATCAATT TGGTCAAAATCC (SEQ ID NO: 18) contig792|size l00|read4|cov2.90 ref_NC_003454.1_:c349745-
348639majoroutermembraneprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ACTTTTTCAGGAGCTGGAGTAGGTGCAGGCATAACTTCCTTAGCTGATGCAACTGATCCAACTA CTAATAATGAACCTAATACTAATGCTAATTTTTTTC (SEQ ID NO: 19) contig782|sizel 02|read3|covl .98 ref_NC_003454.1_: l 157570-
1 157770hypotheticalproteinFN0507[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CTTTGCTAGTAATTTTCATAAATATTCTCCCTTTATTTTTAAATAAAAAAACCGACCTATCGCCT CATTATGGTTTTAGTCGTCAAACACAACAAGTGGTAG (SEQ ID NO: 20) contig754jsize84|read2|covl .81 ref _NC_003454.1_:cl832363-1828797p ruvate- flavodoxinoxidoreductase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TGATAAGTGAGCTACACCAGCTAAGTCCATTACTTCTTGTACTGAATTTGTTGCAAACATTGCA AACCCAGTTTGTCTTGCTGC (SEQ ID NO: 21) contig749|size77|read2|covl .97 ref_NC_003454.1_: l 139707-1140915Acetyl- CoAacetyltransferase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTGGAAGACAAGTTTCTATAAGAGCTGGAATCCCTTATGAAGTCCCAGCTTATTCTGTAAACAT AATTTGTGGAAGC (SEQ ID NO: 22) contig736|size93|read2|covl .63 ref_NC_003454.1_:c403298-
402825hypotheticalproteinFN1 10[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CTTCCATTTCTTTTATTACTCTGTCTGTTATATCTTCTCCACCAACTTTTAATGCTTCTGCTTCAA AAATATAATCATATTTTCCATCTGCTG (SEQ ID NO: 23)
contig721 |sizel33|read3|covl .71 ref_NC_003454.1__:cl 832363-1828797pyravate- flavodoxinoxidoreductase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ATTTCTTTTGCAAAATCTGTATTTAATGCTTCTAATTTTGGAACAAGTATATCTCTAATTTCTCTT GTTCTTACAGAATATTGTCTATTTGTTATCCAATCTTTGAATAAAGTAGCTATATCTTCATTATT TG (SEQ ID NO: 24) contig70|size83|read23|cov21.06 ref_NC_003454.1_:778593- 778820Acylcarrierprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AGAAGAATTTGGAGTAGAAATTCCAGATACAGAAGCAGAAAAAATTAAAACTGTACAAGATGT TATAAACTATATAGAAGCAC (SEQ ID NO: 25)
contig62|sizel05|readl9|covl3.12 ref_NC_003454.1_:c273354-
272989hypotiieticalproteinFN1792[Fusobacteriuiiinucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTTTAATTACTTTTTAAAACTATTTTGCTTCAACAGTTACTGGTGCTTCTTTAAGGTCTCCAAGA GTTAAAACTCCTTCTGTACCTTTAATAGCAACTTCATTTC (SEQ ID NO: 26)
contig596|size91 |read3|cov2.51 ref__NC_003454.1_:c77526- 76342elongationfactorTu[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TCCATGGTCAACGTGCCCAATTGTTCCAATGTTTACATGTGGTTTACTTCTTTCATATTTTTCTTT AGCCATTTTTTCCTCCTAATTAATT (SEQ ID NO: 27) contig559|sizel l9|read2|covl .28 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1486635- 1487651 eriplasmiccomponentofeffluxsystem[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp. nucleatumATCC25586]
TTATATGTGTAAGGATTTACTTATACAGGACTCTCACCTTATGCGGTTTATCTTTCCATACAATT
CTAATTCATCAATACACTATATTGAATATCTTACAGTTCTTCACTACTTTGTCC
(SEQ ID NO: 28) contig555|sizel00|read3|cov2.28 ref_NC_003454.1_:441419-
444013ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TGGAGGTATTGATGAATATAAGAGGGAATAAAAAAGTAGATAATCAAAACCCAGAAGCAACTT ATGAAGTTTTAGAAAAATATGCAAAAGATTTAGTTGA (SEQ ID NO: 29) contig547|size98|read3|cov2.33 ref_NC_003454.1_: l 106662-
1 107207sigma_54_modulationprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ATGCCACTTTAGCTGCTTCTAAATTAAAAACTGGTAATGCACATGTTACAGAAATTTTAGCTTAT CTAAGTGGAAGCACATTGAAAGCCACTGCAACT (SEQ ID NO: 30) contig541 |size86|read3|cov2.24 ref_NC_003454.1_:c349745-
348639majoroutermembraneprotein[Fusobacteriuinnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CCTCCATACCATCTGTATTGAACATCAACTGATCCATTTGGTCTCCAAGCAGGAGCAACTTCTCT GTCTCTGTAAACAATAACTGG (SEQ ID NO: 31) contig540|sizel 54|read5|cov2.47 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl942765-1941737DNA- directedRNApolymerasesubunitalpha[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AACCTCTATATAAAGGTTCTACAATAAATTGAGATTTGTAATTACTTTCTTTAACTTCTGTTATC TTTATTGCTTTAGCCTGCTTTTCTATTTTTAACATTATATCAACTCCTATCAAAAGGATTACATTA TCTTGAATAAAATTCAACTATTA (SEQ ID NO: 32) contig526]sizel 14|read4|cov2.67 ref_NC_003454.1_:c411670-
410144HDsuperfamilyhydrolase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TCATCATCACTAATCTTATCTGGATTGATTACTATTCTTAATTCTCTACCTGCTTGAATAGCATA AGAAGATTCTACACCTTCAAATGAGTTTGCTATTTCTTCAAGATTTTCT (SEQ ID NO: 33)
contig517|sizel36|read4|cov2.24 ref_NC_003454.1_:c77526- 76342elongationfactorTu[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CTCTGATTATAGGGATGTCATCTCCTGGGAATCCATATTCATTTAATAATTCTCTAACTTCCATT TCTACTAATTCTAGTAATTCTTCGTCATCAACCATATCAGATTTGTTTAAGAAAACAACAATATA TGGAAC (SEQ ID NO: 34) contig5H |size95|read3]cov2.40 ref_NC_003454.1 j.cl832363-1828797pyruvate- flavodoxinoxidoreductase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TAGACCAATTTCTTGTGCAAGGGCAGTAGCATTTATAATAAATAATCTTGCCTTATTTTTAGCTA AATCTCTTTTTACATTATTTGGTATATTTT (SEQ ID NO: 35)
contig50 |size77|read 16(cov 15.75 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1964996-
1965190hypotheticalproteinFNl 309[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AAGGAATTGAAGCTCACGGATTAGATGCTAAGGCTATTCTTG ATGAAATTAATTCTCTAATAAA AGAATAATAAATT (SEQ ID NO: 36)
contig505|size99jread2|covl .54 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl942765-1941737DNA- directedRNApolymerasesubunitalpha[Fusobacteriunmucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ACCAGAACTTTCAGCCTTTACAACAATTTCTTTAACATTTAAGATAATTTCTGTAACAGCTTCTT TAACACCATCCATAACAGTAAATTCACTTAAAAC (SEQ ID NO: 37)
contig49|size l 10|read33|cov22.40 ref_NC_003454.1_:778593-
778820Acylcarrierprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
GGAAGATATGTTAGATAAAGTAAAAGAAATTATAGTTGAACAATTAGGAGTGGATGCTGATCA AATAAAACCTGAATCAAATTTTGTAGATGATTTAGGAGCAGATTCTT (SEQ ID NO: 38) contig472|size84|read2|covl .81 ref_NC_003454.1_: l 139707-1 140915Acetyl- CoAacetyltransferase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
GGAGTTTAGCACCTTTAAAACCTGGAGATTTGGGAGCTCAAATAGTAAAAAATATTCTTGAAGA AACAAAAGTAGATCCAGCTA (SEQ ID NO: 39) contig469|sizel00|read2|covl .39 ref_NC_003454.1_:c41 1670-
410144HDsuperfamilyhydrolase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
GAAAGCTCTATAAGAGCTCCTTCACCAGCAGCAATTATTTCTTTTTCAATTTCTTTTTTACATTT ATTTACAATTTCTTCTATCTTACCTGGATGTATTC (SEQ ID NO: 40) contig436|sizel00]read3|cov2.28 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1991809- 1993290transposase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTTTCCATCTTCAAAAATTTGAGTCATTCCAATTTTCTTTCCTAAAATTCCAGACATTTTTAACCT CCATCAAATAATATATTGGTTGATACAACTTACC (SEQ ID NO: 41) contig424|size83|read3|cov2.75 ref_NC_003454.1_:c77526- 76342elongationfactorTu[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CTTGTCTTGAAAGTAAGATATGTTCTCTTGTTTGAGGCATAGGTCCATCAGCAGCTGATACAAC AAGTATAGCTCCGTCCATT (SEQ ID NO: 42) contig422|sizel04|read3|cov2.19 ref_NC_003454.1_:c79696-77615proteintranslationelongationfactorG_EF- G_[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
GTTAGCTCCAATTCTATCCATCTTGTTAAAGAAAGCTAGTCTTGGTACTTTATATTTATCAGCTT GTCTCCACACTGTTTCTGATTGTGGTTGTACACCATCAA (SEQ ID NO:43)
contig419|size88|read2|covl .73 ref_NC_003454.1_:c41 1670-
410144HDsuperfamiIyhydroIase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTTTACACCATCAAAACAAGAAAGTACAACAGCTTCTGGTGTATCATCTATAATCACATCAACA CCTGTTAAAGCCTCAATAGTTCTA (SEQ ID NO: 44) contig414|sizel37|read6|cov3.05 ref_NC_003454.1_:c 132450-
131 170preproteintranslocasesubunitSecY[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] AATGTTGTTTTAATAGATAATGTAGAAGGTAGAGCATTTACTATAACTCCTGGGATTAACATAA ATACTGAGGCAAAGATTACAGGCATTACTCCTGCTGTGTTAAGTCTCAATGGTATAAATGATTT TTCTCCTAT (SEQ ID NO: 45) contig404|sizel32jread4|cov2.30 ref_NC_003454.1_:c l 32450- 131 170preproteintranslocasesubunitSecY[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CCTTTTGAACTAAATCCTTTTCCAACATAATGAATAGGGATTTTTCTTTGTCCAAGTTGAAATAA TACTATTCCAGCTATTGTTACTGTACCAAGAAATGCTACTAATACCAATAAAGGTATTAAGAAT TTA (SEQ ID NO: 46) contig39|sizel29|read40|cov23.26 ref_NC_003454.1 : 1909508- 1910194341d)amembraneantigenprecursor[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] GCAGGTGCAGTTGCTTCTGCAGCAGGTTGTTCAGCTGGTTTTTCTTCTTCTTTCTTTTCTCCACA AGCTACTAAGAATAAACTCATAGCTAGTGCTAACATTGCAAATTTTTTCATTGTTGATCCCTCC
(SEQ ID NO: 47) contig391 |size200|readl6|cov5.99 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1785609-
1786040putativecytoplasmicprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp .nucleatumATCC25586]
GCACAATTAGGTTGGATTGCAACAGTAAGAGAAGATGGAGCACCAAACATTGGACCAAAAAGA TCTTGTCGTATATATGATGATGCAACTTTAATATGGAATGAAAATACAGCTGGTGAAATTATGA AAGATATTGAAAGAGGTTCAAAAGTTGCAATAGCTTTTGCTAACTGGGATAAGTTAGATGGATA TCGTTTTGT (SEQ ID NO: 48) contig380|sizel29|read2|covl . l7 ref_NC_003454.1_:c79696-77615proteintranslationelongationfactorG_EF- G JFusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp .nucleatumATCC25586]
TGTTATTTTATTAACAAATTCAAATTCTTTACCTGGATTTGGTTCAAGTATAATCTTAACATGTC CATATTGTCCTCTACCACCAGATTGTTTTGCATACTTAACTTCTTGATCACAAGATTGAGTTAT
(SEQ ID NO: 49) contig379|size93!read3|cov2.33 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl 332180-
133056160kDachaperoninGROEL[Fusobacteriunmucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTCCCTTTTCTTCTGATATAACTTCTCCACCAGTTAGAATAGCAATATCTTCAAGTATAGCTTTT CTTCTATCTCCAAAAGCAAGGAGCTTTA (SEQ ID NO: 50) contig369|size85jread3|cov2.36 ref_NC_003454.1_:c349745-
348639majoroutermembraneprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AAGTTTCTATATTCAGCACCAGCAGCTGCATATAATTTTACGAAATCTGTTGGTTTATAAGAAA CTTGGAAAGTTGGTAACATAT (SEQ ID NO: 51) contig356|size79|read2|covl .92 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1782271-1783119phosphonates- bindingprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp. nucleatumATCC25586]
CTTTTGCATATATTTTAGCAAATAAAAAGAATGGAACAGAAGCATTACTTACAAGTATAAATAA ACATGATGAACCTGG (SEQ ID NO: 52) contig34|size448|readl43|cov23.10 ref NC_003454.1_:891002-
89139 lhypotheticalproteinFN0264[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] ATTTATTATAATTTAATTTGGGAGGTAACAAAAATGAAAAAATTTTTATTATTAGCAGTATTAG CTGTTTCTGCTTCAGCATTTGCAGCAAATGATGCAGCAAGTTTAGTAGGTGAATTACAAGCATT AGATGCTGAATACCAAAACTTAGCAAATCAAGAAGAAGCAAGATTTAATGAAGAAAAAGCACA AGCTGATGCCGCTAAACAAGCACTAGCACAAAATGAACAAGTTTACAATGAATTATCTCAAAG AGCTCAAAGACTTCAAGCTGAAGCTAACACAAGATTTTATAAATCTCAATATCAAGAATTAGCT TCTAAATATGAAGATGCTTTAAAGAAATTAGAAGCTGAAATGGAACAACAAAAAGGTGTCATT TCTGACTTTGAAAAGATTCAAGCTTTAAGAGCTGGTAACTAATAAATTTTGAAAAAATGCTAGC ATG (SEQ ID NO: 53) contig339|size94|read2|covl .62 ref NC_003454.1 jc326804-323994TPRrepeat- containingprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp ,nucleatumATCC25586]
TAATACTTTTTGAAAGTCTGCTTCTGCTTCATCATATTTTCCAAGTCCCATAGCAGCTATACCTT TTAAATAGTTCACACTGCTTTCATCTTGT (SEQ ID NO: 54) contig309|sizel09|read2|covl .39 ref_NC_003454.1_:c886099-884255Zinc- transportingATPase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ATTGCTAAACCTATAACTATTGGTGTATATATTTTAGAAAATCTTGTTATTAATCTTTCAGATTT TGACTTTTTAGCTGAGGCATTTTCTACTAAATCTAAAACTTTAT (SEQ ID NO: 55) contig307|size77|read2|covl .97 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl678570-1678262DNA- bindingproteinHU[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTTTTAACTTCTCTCGCACTTCTTTCTTTTACTTCCCAAGAACCAAATCCTATGAATCTTACTCCA TCACCTTTTAG (SEQ ID NO: 56) contig301 |size88|read3|cov2.30 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl 1 18255- 1 1 17752flavodoxinFldA[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CCATCATCTTGTAATTCTCCTGCACCATAAGTTGGAGAAGCCATTATAATGTTATCAAAAACTTC CATTTCAGCAACACCATTAGCAA (SEQ ID NO: 57)
contig294|size244|readl2|cov3.74 ref_NC_003454.1 : 1760699-
1761028hypotheticalproteinFNl l 18[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ACTGAAATAAAAGTAACTTCAATAACCATAGTTATGATTAAGGTAGAAATTTTTAGAAAAAATG GTAGTATAATAGGATATAAAGCAAATGGACATTCTGGATATTCAGAACAAGGTAGTGATATCAT CTGTTCTGCTATCTCAACATCATTACAAATGACTTTGGCAGGAATTCAAGAAGTGTTAAAGTTA GAACCTAAATTTAAAATGAATGATGGTTTTCTTGATGTTGATTTAAGAAATA (SEQ ID NO: 58) contig293|sizel21 |read6|cov3.77 ref_NC_003454.1_:441419- 444013ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
GTTGTTAGAATAGATATGAGTGAATATATGGATAAGTTTTCAGTTACAAGACTTATAGGTGCAC CTCCAGGATATGTTGGTTATGAAGAAGGAGGACAACTTACAGAAGCTATTAGAACTA
(SEQ ID NO: 59) contig276|size248|readl3|cov3.98 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl 118255-
1 1 17752flavodoxinFldA[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TATCATATGAAGCATCTATTGCAAGTCCCATAAATTTATCTCCATCAATAACTGCTTCAGAAGCT TCAAAATCGTATCCATCAGTAGAAGTAAATCCAACTATTTTAGCTCCTTTAGGTTGAACTGCATC ATATAAATGTTTCAAAGCTTCAACATAGTTTCCACCAAATATTGCAGCATCTCCTACACCAACTA ATGCAACAACTTTTCCAGAGAAGTCCATATCAGCAACTTCATCAATAACAGAA (SEQ ID NO: 60) contig269 |size82 jread3 |cov2.78 ref_NC_003454.1 :441419- 444013ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
GATGAAATTGAAAAAGCTCACCCTGATGTATTTAATGTGCTATTACAAGTTTTAGATGATGGTA GACTTACAGATGGACAAG (SEQ ID NO: 61) contig267|sizel00jread4|cov3.04 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl 832363-1828797pyruvate- flavodoxinoxidoreductase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TAAATATTGGCCAATATCCACATTCAGTAGCAAGCTTCATTTCAGTTTGAGATTTTGACATACCT TTCTTAATACCATGGTTGATACAAGGTGAGTATGC (SEQ ID NO: 62) contig266|sizel00[read3|cov2.28 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl32450- 131170preproteintranslocasesubunitSecY[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TGAGGAATAATAGATACAAGCAAACTTACAACTATTGAAGCATTGATGTAAGGAATAATTCCTA ATGAGAATATAGATATTCTTGTAAAAGCTCCACCAG (SEQ ID NO: 63) contig262|sizel 61 |read6|cov2.83 ref_NC _003454.1_:c549749-
549168transcriptionantiterminationproteinnusG[Fusobacteriunmucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATC
TCCAAAAATATCAACCATTACTTTAACTCTACCATGTTCATGATCTATTTCAGCAACTTGTCCTT CTTGATCTTTAAATGAACCTTTTAAGATTTTTACATAATCTCCTTCTGTAAAGTCAACTTTTATA GTTTCTTTAGGTGTCTTTACACCTATTATAT (SEQ ID NO: 64) contig261 |size240|readl7|cov5.38 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl 832363-1828797pyruvate- flavodoxinoxidoreductase[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AAGGTGAGTATGCAATAATTATTGATGGTCCTTGGTGAGCTTCTGCTTCCTTAACAGCCTTAAT AAATTGTTGTTGATTAGCTCCCATAGAAACTTGTGCTACATAGATATGTCCATAAGACATTGCT ATTGCAGCTAAATCTTTTTTCTTAACTGGTTTTCCAGCTGCTGCAAATTTTGCAACTGCTCCAGT AGGTGTAGCTTTTGATGCTTGTCCACCAGTATTTGAATAAACTTCTG
(SEQ ID NO: 65) contig248|sizel00|read6|cov4.13 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl942765-1941737DNA- directedR Apolymerasesubunitalpha[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TAGAATTTCCTCCTCTTTTCAAAATTATTCAGGAGATCCATTTTTTTCAAGATCATATCCTAAAT CTTTCATCTTTTCTAAAATCTCATCTAAAGATTTC (SEQ ID NO: 66) contig241 |sizel23|readl0|cov6.18 ref_NC_003454.1_:729309- 729620thioredoxin[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AATTGGTGTGGGCCTTGTAAAAGTTTAGTGCCTATACTTGAGGAAGTTGTTGAAGAAGATCCAA GTAAAAAAATAGTAAAAGTAGATATAGATGAACAAGAAGAACTAGCAACACAATATAAA (SEQ ID NO: 67) contig227|size86|read3|cov2.65 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl 1 18255- 1117752flavodoxiiiFldA[Fusobacteriumiiucleatumsubsp.nucleatuinATCC25586]
ACTGTTTTCATTTAAAATTAC (SEQ ID NO: 68) contig221 |size83|read5!cov4.58 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1785609- 1786040putativecytoplasmicprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TCGTTTTGTAGGGACAGCAGAAGTTCATAAAGAAGGAAAATATTATGATGAAGCTGTTGAATG GGCAAAAGGAAAAATGGGAG (SEQ ID NO: 69) contig202|size83 jread3 |cov2.75 ref_NC_003454. l_:c 132450- 131 170preproteintranslocasesubunitSecY[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AAATACTGTTCCAGCTGTTAGGGTTGTTATTGTTCTTACAAAAAAACTTATTCCTGGATTATAGA TCAAACCAACAGATTGTA (SEQ ID NO: 70) contigl90jsizel93|read8|cov3.15 ref_NC_003454.1_:c77526-
76342elongationfactorTu[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] AACTCTTCCTGTAACAACTGTTCCTCTTCCTGTGATAGTGAAAACATCTTCTATTGGCATTAAGA ATGGTTGATCTATTGCTCTTTCTGGAGTAGGGATATAGTTATCTACTGCTTCCATAAGTTCTAAT ATTTTTTCAACCCATTTTTCTTCACCATTTAAAGCACCTAATGCTGAACCTCTGATTATAGGG
(SEQ ID NO: 71) contigl 56|sizel 86|readl l |cov4.49 ref_NC_003454.1_:c77526- 76342elongationfactorTu[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTCCTCTTAATAACACTCCAATGTTATCTCCTGCTTGACCTTGATCAAGAAGTTTTCTAAACATT TCAACACCTGTACAAGTTGTTTTAGTTGTAGGTTTGATACCAACTATTTCAATTTCTTCTCCAAC TTTGATAACTCCTCTTTCAACTCTTCCTGTAACAACTGTTCCTCTTCCTGTGATAG
(SEQ ID NO: 72) contigl52|size87|read3|cov2.62 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl07268-105943nitrogenfixationiron- sulphurproteinRNFC [Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AATTTTTCAATTGGTAAATGTTCTGTTTGTATTTTATTTTCAGGGGGATGGACTCCACCTCTGAA ACCAAAAAATGTCATTTAAAAC (SEQ ID NO: 73) contigl42|size88|read9|cov7.62 ref_NC_003454.1_: 1785609-
1786040putativecytoplasmicprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
CAAGAATAAGGAGTGATAATAATGGCTAAATTAACAGATGCTATAAAAGATTTAATATTAAAC CCAGTTAAAGAAGGAGCTTGGACAG (SEQ ID NO: 74) contigl36!sizel00|readl3|cov8.63 ref_NC_003454.1_:c 1944753-
1944505proteintranslationinitiationfactorl [Fusobacteriuimucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] TATGCCCATTTTCTAATTCTACTTTAAACATAGCATTAGGTAAGGCTTCTACTATAACACCTTCC AATTCGATAACATCTTTCTTTGACATTTTTCCTCC (SEQ ID NO: 75) contigl 35|sizel77|read58|cov23.62 ref_NC_003454.1_:c273354-
272989hypotheticalproteinFN1792[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TTCTCCAGATGCAGTTTCAGCATTTTTTAATTCAGTTGCTTTTCCATCTGCATCAGTTAAAGTTG
CAGTACTTCCATCAGCAGCAACTACTAATGTAAATTCCTTTCCATCTTCAGTTTTAAGTGAGAAT
GTTTTAGCTTCAGCAGCAGCTTCAGTTGCTGGTGCTTCTGTAGCAGG (SEQ ID NO: 76) contigl 19|size98jread8|cov6.20 ref_NC_003454.1_:729309-
729620thioredoxin[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AAATAAAAATTTTAGGAGGATTGTAAGATGGCAATTATAAAAGGAACAAAAGAAAATTTTGAA
GCAGAAGTATTAAAAGCAAATGGAGTTGTAGTAGT (SEQ ID NO: 77) contigl l46|size79jread2|covl .54 ref_NC_003454.1_:595848- 596567permease[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TAACATATCAATAATACTTTTGTCAAGAAAAATTATAGTGCAGACTTAGCAGCTTCTACTAATTT TGTAAATTCAGTAG (SEQ ID NO: 78)
contigl 134|sizel04|read2|covl .46 ref_NC_003454.1 :c349745- 348639majoroutermembraneprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TACTACTTTTTCAGGAGCTGGAGTAGGTGCAGGCATAACTTCCTTAGCTGATGCAACTGATCCA ACTACTAATAATGAACCTAATACTAATGCTAATTTTTTCA (SEQ ID NO: 79)
contigl 1 10|size92|read2|covl .65 ref_NC_003454.1_:441419-
444013ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
ATCCTAATAGACCTATGGGTTCATTTATATTCTTAGGACCTACTGGTGTTGGTAAGACATACCTT GCAAAAACTTTGGCATATAACCTATTT (SEQ ID NO: 80) contigl 107jsizel27|read2|covl .18 ref_NC_003454.1_:c79696-
77615proteintranslationelongationfactorG_EF-G_[Fusobacteriunmucleatiimsubsp.nucleatxiniATCC25586] CTCTTCTTGAATTTAAGTCTCCAATAATATCTCCCATATATTCTTCTGGTGTTGTTACTTCAACTT TGAATACTGGTTCTAATATCACTGGTTTAGCCTTTGCAGCAGCTTGTTTAACAGCCATTGA (SEQ ID NO: 81) contigl096|size84|read4|cov2.99 ref_NC_003454.1_:441419- 444013ClpBprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
TATTAGTAAATGAACCTAATATTGATGATACTATTTCAATATTAAGAGGTCTTAAAGATAAATT TGAAACTTATCATGGTGTTA (SEQ ID NO: 82) contigl051 |size89|read2|covl .28 ref_NC_003454.1_:c79696-77615proteintranslationelongationfactorG_EF- G [Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp .nucleatumATCC25586]
AACCAATGGATATCCAGCAATAACTCCTGATTCAAGAGCTTCTCTACATCCTTTTTCAACAGCA GGTATATATTCTCTTGGAATTACCC (SEQ ID NO: 83) contigl02|size81 !read7|cov6.57 ref_NC_003454.1_:cl 309231-
1307807Na+/H+antiporterNHAC[Fusobacteriunmucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586] ATAGCTCATTTTGCTATCTTTAATTTAACACCAATTTTATGGTTGCTTTTTGTCTTTTCTCTATTC TGTTGCTAATGTCCT (SEQ ID NO: 84) contigl024|size81 |read2|covl .80 ref_NC_003454.1_:c l332180-
133056160kDachaperoninGROEL[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp .nucleatumATCC25586]
TTTATAACAAGAGTTGTTAGAGCTTCTCCTTCAATATCATCAGCTACAATTAAAACTGGCTTAGA CATTTGCACAGTTTTT (SEQ ID NO: 85) contigl022|size80|read3jcov2.85 ref_NC_003454.1_:c349745-
348639maj oroutermembraneprotein[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AGTTTTCAGTTTCTCCATACCATCTGTATTGAACATCAACTGATCCATTTGGTCTCCAAGCAGGA GCAACTTCTCTGTCT (SEQ ID NO: 86) contigl016|sizel00iread2|covl .52 ref_NC_003454.1_:829712-831466glutaconyl- Co Adecarboxylase Asub nit[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp .nucleatumATCC25586]
AGAAATTACTATTAGAAAAGGTTCAGCAGCGGCTCACTATGTATTGGGTGGACCACAAGGTAAT AATACAAATGCTTTCTCATTAGGAACAGCAGCAACA (SEQ ID NO: 87) contigl012|size98|read3|cov2.33 ref_NC_003454.1jc77526- 76342elongationfactorTu[Fusobacteriumnucleatumsubsp.nucleatumATCC25586]
AATACATAAACTTCACCTTTGAAGTTTGTATGAGGGTGGATACTTCCTGGTTTAGCAAGAACTT GTCCTCTTTCAACTTCTTCTTTCTTAGTTCCTCT (SEQ ID NO: 88)
[0058] A 161 bp contig that returned a high quality BLAST match (95% identity) to the nusG gene (GenBank accession AAL94126.1) of F. nucleatum, and no match to any gene of any other species, was used as the target for designing a qPCR (Taqman, ABI) primer/probe set. The initial metagenomics screen described above involved interrogation of expressed genes, however, once we established F. nucleatum as a candidate pathogen, we switched to analysis of gDNA because a larger amount of high quality DNA than RNA was obtainable from the frozen tissue sections. We conducted qPCR on gDNA isolated from an additional 88 colorectal carcinomas and matched normal specimens and confirmed an overrepresentation of F. nucleatum in tumour versus matched normal specimens (p=2.5E-6, two-tailed ratio t-test) (Fig. 4A). The Fusobacterium abundance measured by qPCR correlated with that measured from the RNA-seq data (Pearson's r = 0.97). The mean overall abundance of Fusobacterium found to be 415 times greater in the tumour samples (n = 99) than in the matched normal samples (n = 99) (Fig. 4A). A similar validation study using matched and normal pairs of specimens from colorectal carcinoma subjects showed a strong over-representation of the F. nucleatum homologous sequence in tumour compared to matched normal control tissue (p = 1.5E-5, ratio t test) (Fig. 4B).
EXAMPLE 3: Isolation, Culture and Whole Renome sequencing of a representative strain of F. nucleatum
[0059] We attempted to culture Fusobacteria anaerobically, directly from twelve of the frozen tumour sections that showed high abundance by qPCR, and obtained a single isolate (CC53).
[0060] More specifically, frozen tumour sections were thawed and immediately placed into 500 ml of pre-reduced phosphate buffered saline, and the tissue agitated and gently broken up using a pipette fitted with a sterile, wide-bore, plugged tip. 100 ml aliquots of this suspension were directly spread onto pre-reduced fastidious anaerobe agar (FAA) plates supplemented with 5% defibrinated sheep blood (DSB), and incubated for 10 days in a humidified anaerobe chamber (Ruskinn Bug Box). Plates were inspected every 2 days for growth, and all colonies were picked and streak-purified on further pre-reduced
FAA+5% DSB plates. Single colonies were examined by phase microscopy using a Leica ICC50 microscope fitted with a l OOx oil immersion objective, looking for slender rods or needle-shaped cells characteristic of F. nucleatum. gDNA was isolated from positively identified isolates using a Maxwell 16 instrument with cell DNA cartridges, and aliquots used as template in PCR with primers and conditions as described by Kim et al. (2004) . A product size of 495 nt confirmed that the isolate belonged to the Fusobacterium genus, and a further PCR to partially amplify 16S rRNA gene was carried out using the same DNA template using primers and conditions as defined by Ben-Dov et al. (Ben-Dov et al. 2006). This product was sent for Sanger sequence analysis to MWG Operon, and obtained traces confirmed F. nucleatum as the species. In total, 3 clones of the isolated strain were obtained from the tumour specimen from patient number 53, and named CC53 F, G and H respectively. All strains were stored at -80°C in cryoprotectant media (12% w/v skim milk powder, 1% (v/v) dimethyl sulfoxide and 1% (v/v) glycerol).
[0061] We purified high molecular weight (HMW) gDNA from CC53 culture and constructed and sequenced a whole genome shotgun (WGS) library using the Illumina HiSeq platform.
[0062] More specifically, Fusobacterium genomic DNA was sonicated and size fractions between 175 to 200 bp and 400 to 450 bp were isolated following PAGE. WGSS Paired- end Illumina libraries were prepared from each size fraction as described previously with the following modifications: the final PCR amplification was increased to 15 cycles and contained the standard Illumina PE1 PCR primer and an indexed PE2 primer as detailed above for RNA-Seq library construction. A total of 92.0M paired 100 nt reads were obtained from a single lane of the Illumina HiSeq instrument. After quality filtering, keeping only pairs with an average base quality of Q30 or higher, 64.8M paired reads were aligned with novoalign (www.novocraft.com; -o SAM -r A -R 0) onto the F.
nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586 (GenBank accession NC 003454.1) and Fusobacterium sp. 3_1_36A2 genome sequences (HMP accessions GG698790- GG698801), respectively. Paired read alignments were processed using custom PERL scripts that tracked genome sequence coverage, depth of coverage and average sequence identity of mapped pairs. Annotation of strain sp. 3_1_36A2 regions devoid of read alignments was performed by extracting the coordinates of alignment gaps lkbp or larger and mining the HMP GenBank-format file for existing gene annotations
(http://www.hmpdacc.org/data_genomes.php). Reads that did not align onto the sp.
3 1 36A2 genome assembly were quality-trimmed to only include those having 70 or more consecutive Q30 bases and assembled with SSAKE (v3.7 -p 1 -m 20 -o 2 -r 0.7) in 67 contigs (mean size=l,225bp max size=6,018bp total bases= 82,076bp N50=l,359bp). The contigs were annotated using BLASTX (v2.2.25), reporting the best hit for each high- scoring pairs and manually inspecting each alignment.
[0063] In a separate analysis, the 64.8M paired QC reads were filtered further, leaving only sequences having 99 or 100 consecutive Q30 bases. This aggressive filter yielded approximately 32M total reads, including 4.5M paired and 22.9M unpaired reads and assembled with SSAKE (v3.7 -p 1 -m 20 -o 2 -r 0.7) into 379 contigs (mean
size=5,460bp max size=31,878bp total bases= 2,069,558bp N50=8,680bp). The
Fusobacterium sp. 3_1_36A2 genome assembly was aligned onto the type strain using cross match (www.phrap.org; -minmatch 29 -minscore 59 -masklevel 101) and ordered/oriented based on the latter. Fusobacterium tumour isolate contigs were in turn aligned onto the reordered Fusobacterium sp. 3 1 36A2 HMP genome assembly and ordered/oriented according to that genome sequence, using the same cross match parameters. Three-way cross match alignments between the ordered Fusobacterium genomes were performed and plotted using hive plots (www.hiveplot.com). [0064] We obtained an excessive number (64,819,156) of quality filtered paired 100 nt reads. These reads were aligned to the F. nucleatum type strain American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) 25586 (Genbank accession NC_003454.1) sequence, covering 76% of this reference genome with 2,661 -fold mean depth and 95.6 +/- 2.0% (mean +/- SD) identity. Further, we aligned reads from CC53 to 483 additional draft genome sequences available from the Human Microbiome Project (HMP) (Nelson et al. 2010) including sixteen as of yet incomplete Fusobacterium genomes. CC53 aligned with highest identity to Fusobacterium sp. 3_1_36A2, covering 91.6% of the 12-supercontig draft assembly with 99.5 +/- 1.2% (mean +/- SD) sequence identity. Three-way analysis among these strains using cross-match Smith-Waterman alignments confirmed that CC53 is closest to Fusobacterium sp. 3_1_36A2.
[0065] More specifically, approximately 32M high-quality WGS Illumina HiSeq reads (>= 99 consecutive Q30 bases) from Fusobacterium tumour isolate CC53 were assembled with SSAKE (v3.7, default options) into 379 contigs. The contigs were aligned using cross_match (-minmatch 29 -minscore 59 -masklevel 101) to the complete F. nucleatum subsp. nucleatum ATCC 25586 genome and, independently to the 12-contig HMP
Fusobacterium sp. 3 1 36A2 assembly, respectively and ordered/oriented based on the highest identity to the latter sequence. Three-way cross_match (www.phrap.org) alignments between each Fusobacterium genomes were performed and represented visually using hive plots (www.hiveplot.com). Sequence similarity and synteny was highest between CC53 and sp. 3_1_36A2, , as evidenced by a greater density of high similarity sequence matches between them, relative to relative to ATCC 25586, and shared patterns of inversions compared to this reference strain. Three regions of sequences present in sp. 3_1_36A2 but absent from CC53 were apparent as conspicuous gaps on the sp. 3_1_36A2 axis.
[0066] Some notable differences were apparent, however. We observed 19 segments from strain 3_1_36A2 that were missing from CC53. The majority (156/206) of the predicted coding sequences (CDS) on these segments from strain 3_1_36A2 had unknown function, but there were numerous sequences indicative of prophage content, including genes encoding putative helicase, integrase, recombinase, terminase and topoisomerase activity (Table 3).
Table 3. Gene content of gaps (segments from strain 3 1 36A2 accession that are missing from CC53).
Coordinates Unaligned
of unaligned region CDS start CDS end
region length Protein id coordinate coordinate Predicted product
160980-
162119 1 139 EEU32070.1 161007 162053 predicted protein
163749-
165149 1400 EEU32072.1 162670 163818 2-nitropropane dioxygenase
163749-
165149 1400 EEU32073.1 163997 164458 N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase
163749-
165149 1400 EEU32074.1 164490 165128 conserved hypothetical protein
163749-
165149 1400 EEU32075.1 166472 165135 conserved hypothetical protein
230196-
237851 7655 EEU32133.1 230444 234547 CRISPR-associated protein
230196-
237851 7655 EEU32134.1 234572 235450 CRISPR-associated protein casl
230196-
237851 7655 EEU32135.1 235440 235760 conserved hypothetical protein
230196-
237851 7655 EEU32136.1 235757 236419 conserved hypothetical protein
230196-
237851 7655 EEU32137.1 238229 237840 conserved hypothetical protein
413437-
423361 9924 EEU32297.1 415519 413525 hemin receptor
413437- 9924 EEU32298.1 415901 416818 nickel ABC transporter Coordinates Unaligned
of unaligned region CDS start CDS end
region length Protein id coordinate coordinate Predicted product
423361
413437-
423361 9924 EEU32299.1 416839 417642 nickel ABC transporter
413437- nickel import ATP-binding protein
423361 9924 EEU32300.1 417655 418416 NikD
413437- nickel import ATP-binding protein
423361 9924 EEU32301.1 418421 419113 NikE
413437- nickel import ATP-binding protein
423361 9924 EEU32302.1 4191 10 420735 NikE
413437-
423361 9924 EEU32303.1 421767 420790 transcriptional regulator AraC family
413437-
423361 9924 EEU32304.1 421979 423325 MATE efflux family protein
800252-
803854 3602 EEU32662.1 800383 798980 MATE efflux family protein
800252- phosphonate C-P lyase system
803854 3602 EEU32663.1 801168 800395 protein PhnK
800252-
803854 3602 EEU32664.1 802198 801161 transport system permease
800252-
803854 3602 EEU32665.1 803435 802293 periplasmic binding protein
800252-
803854 3602 EEU32666.1 803816 803643 predicted protein
804906-
806958 2052 EEU32668.1 806372 805035 conserved hypothetical protein
804906-
806958 2052 EEU32669.1 806844 806386 conserved hypothetical protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32722.1 855099 855521 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32723.1 855650 856117 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32724.1 860232 856126 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32725.1 862070 860229 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32726.1 862942 862052 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32727.1 864868 862955 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32728.1 865392 864868 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32729.1 865593 865405 conserved hypothetical protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32730.1 866029 865598 conserved hypothetical protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32731.1 866417 866037 conserved hypothetical protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32732.1 866976 866473 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32733.1 867481 866978 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32734.1 868738 867494 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32735.1 869642 868791 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32736.1 870369 869653 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32737.1 870587 870369 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32738.1 872229 870577 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32739.1 872706 872239 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32740.1 874108 872717 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32741.1 874781 874083 predicted protein
854976- 21753 EEU32742.1 875192 875425 predicted protein Coordinates Unaligned
of unaligned region CDS start CDS end
region length Protein id coordinate coordinate Predicted product
876729
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32743.1 875441 875674 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32744.1 875664 875915 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32745.1 876091 875912 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32746.1 876444 876091 predicted protein
854976-
876729 21753 EEU32747.1 876724 876449 predicted protein
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32748.1 877946 877146 replicative DNA helicase
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32749.1 878688 877948 conserved hypothetical protein
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32750.1 880025 879648 predicted protein
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32751.1 880385 880164 predicted protein
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32752.1 880941 880543 predicted protein
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32753.1 881131 880952 predicted protein
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32754.1 881328 881131 conserved hypothetical protein
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32755.1 882003 881347 LexA repressor
877026-
882644 5618 EEU32756.1 882166 882540 predicted protein
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32757.1 883275 883967 conserved hypothetical protein
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32758.1 883977 884489 gp157
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32759.1 884500 885222 predicted protein
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32760.1 885219 885518 conserved hypothetical protein
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32761.1 885515 885745 phage protein
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32762.1 885708 886172 phage protein
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32763.1 886162 886734 conserved hypothetical protein
883266-
886895 3629 EEU32764.1 886721 886873 predicted protein
887195-
890120 2925 EEU32765.1 887406 887561 predicted protein
887195-
890120 2925 EEU32766.1 887576 887806 predicted protein
887195-
890120 2925 EEU32767.1 887775 888182 conserved hypothetical protein
887195-
890120 2925 EEU32768.1 888187 888717 conserved hypothetical protein
887195-
890120 2925 EEU32769.1 888731 888922 predicted protein
DNA
887195- integration/recombination/invertion
890120 2925 EEU32770.1 888960 890027 protein
DNA
965306- integration/recombination/invertion
1019450 54144 EEU32841.1 966788 965571 protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32842.1 967072 966854 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32843.1 967701 967090 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32844.1 968005 967811 predicted protein
965306- 54144 EEU32845.1 968658 968203 predicted protein Coordinates Unaligned
of unaligned region CDS start CDS end
region length Protein id coordinate coordinate Predicted product
1019450
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32846.1 968932 968690 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32847.1 969592 969347 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32848.1 969875 969612 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32849.1 970173 969913 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32850.1 970620 970282 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32851.1 970875 970666 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32852.1 971132 970980 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32853.1 971450 971241 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32854.1 971649 971443 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32855.1 973026 972361 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32856.1 973736 973035 ATPase
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32857.1 973922 974233 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32858.1 974562 974254 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32859.1 975174 974566 lytic transglycosylase
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32860.1 977485 975188 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32861.1 978407 978042 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32862.1 978937 978455 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32863.1 979139 978984 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32864.1 979795 979139 resolvase/recombinase
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32865.1 980528 979782 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32866.1 980698 980540 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32867.1 981075 980707 resolvase/recombinase
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32868.1 981730 981062 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32869.1 981903 981730 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32870.1 982381 982019 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32871.1 982653 982450 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32872.1 983480 982896 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32873.1 983895 983494 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32874.1 984215 983892 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32875.1 990789 984421 helicase
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32876.1 992550 990865 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32877.1 993259 992810 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32878.1 993786 993256 predicted protein
965306- 54144 EEU32879.1 996192 993802 type I topoisomease Coordinates Unaligned
of unaligned region CDS start CDS end
region length Protein id coordinate coordinate Predicted product
1019450
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32880.1 996886 996269 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32881.1 997613 997140 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32882.1 998631 997690 predicted protein
965306- conjugative transfer signal peptidase
1019450 54144 EEU32883.1 999162 998644 TraF
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32884.1 999454 999164 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32885.1 999851 999642 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32886.1 1000454 1000095 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32887.1 1000741 1000538 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32888.1 1001035 1000859 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32889.1 1001463 10011 0 predicted protein
965306- TrbL/VirB6 plasmid conjugal transfer
1019450 54144 EEU32890.1 1002564 1001503 protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32891.1 1003026 1002568 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32892.1 1003896 1003048 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32893.1 1006532 1004058 conjugal transfer protein TrbE
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32894.1 1006825 1006538 predicted protein
965306- P-type conjugative transfer ATPase
1019450 54 44 EEU32895.1 1007801 1006845 TrbB
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32896.1 1008154 1007801 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32897.1 1010223 1008154 TRAG protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32898.1 1010784 1010308 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32899.1 1012013 1010799 conjugation Trbl family protein
965306- P-type conjugative transfer protein
1019450 54144 EEU32900.1 101281 1 1012023 VirB9
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32901.1 1013518 1012823 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32902.1 1013896 1013579 conjugal transfer protein TrbC
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32903.1 1014228 1013893 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32904.1 1015212 1014400 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32905.1 1015636 1015244 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32906.1 1016055 1015723 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32907.1 1016469 1016074 predicted protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32908.1 1016769 1016473 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32909.1 1016991 1016851 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32910.1 1017888 1017229 conserved hypothetical protein
965306-
1019450 54144 EEU32911.1 1019162 1017885 predicted protein
11 10825-
1 134389 23564 EEU32992.1 11 11325 1110942 toxin secretion/phage lysis holin
1110825- 23564 EEU32993.1 11 11789 1111340 conserved hypothetical protein Coordinates Unaligned
of unaligned region CDS start CDS end
region length Protein id coordinate coordinate Predicted product
1134389
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU32994.1 1112159 1 11 1776 conserved hypothetical protein
1 110825-
1134389 23564 EEU32995.1 11 12371 1112174 predicted protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU32996.1 1 112940 1112431 conserved hypothetical protein
11 10825-
1134389 23564 EEU32997.1 1 113824 1 113054 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU32998.1 11 14533 1113811 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU32999.1 1 115187 1114537 conserved hypothetical protein
11 10825-
1134389 23564 EEU33000.1 11 16244 1 115180 baseplate J-like protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33001.1 1 116673 11 16245 phage protein
1110825-
1 134389 23564 EEU33002.1 1 117127 1116675 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33003.1 11 18167 1 117124 predicted protein
1 110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33004.1 1118618 11 18172 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1 134389 23564 EEU33005.1 1120539 1 118632 phage protein
11 10825-
1134389 23564 EEU33006.1 1121062 1 120601 predicted protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33007.1 1121594 1121226 conserved hypothetical protein
1 110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33008.1 1122044 1121604 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33009.1 1 123136 1122057 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33010.1 1 123585 1123136 conserved hypothetical protein
11 10825-
1 134389 23564 EEU33011.1 1123962 1 123582 phage protein
11 10825-
1134389 23564 EEU33012.1 1124317 1123952 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33013.1 1124643 1124314 conserved hypothetical protein
1 110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33014.1 1 124884 1124678 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33015.1 1 126087 1 124894 phage protein
1110825-
1 134389 23564 EEU33016.1 1126710 1126087 predicted protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33017.1 1127074 1126856 conserved hypothetical protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33018.1 1128740 1127058 phage protein
1 110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33020.1 1 130040 1128724 terminase
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33019.1 1 130040 1128724 phage portal protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33021.1 1 131871 1131479 phage Terminase Small Subunit
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33022.1 1 132196 1131936 predicted protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33023.1 1 133038 1132538 predicted protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33024.1 1 133406 1 133050 predicted protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33025.1 1 134145 1133408 phage antirepressor protein
1110825-
1134389 23564 EEU33026.1 1 134359 1 134150 predicted protein
1134686- 6809 EEU33027.1 1 136021 1 134807 replicative DNA helicase Coordinates Unaligned
of unaligned region CDS start CDS end
region length Protein id coordinate coordinate Predicted product
1141495
1134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33028.1 1136792 1136022 conserved hypothetical protein
1134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33029.1 1137732 1137460 predicted protein
1134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33030.1 1 138145 1137930 predicted protein
1134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33031.1 1 138750 1 138265 predicted protein
1134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33032.1 1139046 1138882 predicted protein
1134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33033.1 1139965 1139114 predicted protein
1 134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33034.1 1 140391 1139975 conserved hypothetical protein
1 134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33035.1 1 140823 1140404 predicted protein
1134686-
1141495 6809 EEU33036.1 1141005 1 141391 predicted protein
1142122-
1 145342 3220 EEU33037.1 1142129 1142821 conserved hypothetical protein
1142122-
1145342 3220 EEU33038.1 1142831 1143343 predicted protein
1142122-
1145342 3220 EEU33039.1 1 143353 1143595 predicted protein
1142122-
1145342 3220 EEU33040.1 1143607 1 144329 predicted protein
1142122-
1 145342 3220 EEU33041.1 1144326 1 144604 predicted protein
1142122-
1145342 3220 EEU33042.1 1144729 1145166 conserved hypothetical protein
1 142122-
1145342 3220 EEU33043.1 1145169 1145321 predicted protein
1 145607-
1149818 42 1 EEU33044.1 1 145689 1145847 predicted protein
1 145607-
1149818 4211 EEU33045.1 1145834 1146547 conserved hypothetical protein
1 145607-
1149818 4211 EEU33046.1 1 146612 1147022 predicted protein
1 145607-
1149818 4211 EEU33047.1 1 147025 1 147480 conserved hypothetical protein
1 145607-
1149818 4211 EEU33048.1 1 147487 1147777 predicted protein
1 145607-
1149818 4211 EEU33049.1 1 147777 1 148307 conserved hypothetical protein
1 145607-
1149818 4211 EEU33050.1 1148298 1 148429 predicted protein
1145607-
1149818 4211 EEU33051.1 1148500 1 148697 predicted protein
1145607-
1 149818 4211 EEU33052.1 1148672 1149727 phage integrase
[0067] De novo assembly of unmapped CC53 reads yielded 82 kbp of sequence in 67 contigs >500 nt. These contigs aligned with variable sequence identity to one of the sixteen Fusobacterium genome assemblies or the ATCC type strain. BLASTX (Altschul et al. 1997) searches of GenBank-nr identified 99 coding sequences (Table 4), the most recurrent of which was hemolysin, a bacterial endotoxin.
Table 4
Figure imgf000044_0001
Sequence
identity Alignment Alignment Predicted gene
Accession (%) start end product Species
protein sp. 3 1 36A2
Propionate CoA- Fusobacterium
ZP 04574788.1 100.0 48 1598 transferase sp. 7 1
Fusobacterium
ZP 04574789.1 100.0 1677 3014 Propionate permease sp. 7 1
Fusobacterium
ZP 04571805.1 95.8 2 427 Hemolysin sp. 4 1 13
YP_003945856. Hemagglutination Paenibacillus 1 82.6 458 733 activity domain protein polymyxa SC2
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 04571802.1 90.9 1075 1305 protein sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00144656.1 100.0 1337 1519 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00144284.1 99.6 1343 3 Hemolysin ATCC 49256
Histidyl-tRNA Fusobacterium
ZP 05551287.1 100.0 485 3 synthetase sp. 3 1 36A2
Recombination factor Fusobacterium
ZP 05442395.1 100.0 907 500 protein RarA sp. Dl l
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00143333.1 99.4 1797 238 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 05550632.1 97.9 1933 1793 protein sp. 3 1 36A2
ABC transporter iron
chelate uptake
transporter (FeCT) Fusobacterium
ZP 06750290.1 99.7 1685 693 family sp. 3 1 27
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp.
Iron(III) dicitrate- nucleatum
ZP 06869931.1 99.4 2753 1704 binding protein ATCC 23726
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 05816109.1 98.9 4431 2779 protein sp. 3 1 33
Fusobacterium sp. 3_1_27
ZP 06750286.1 99.6 5210 4473 Nitrogenase iron protein Sequence
identity Alignment Alignment Predicted gene
Accession (%) start end product Species
Fusobacterium nucleatum
Iron(III) dicitrate subsp. transport ATP-binding nucleatum
NP 603209.1 99.2 6017 5295 protein fecE ATCC 25586
Fusobacterium
ZP 04571805.1 99.4 1515 1 Hemolysin sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium
ZP 06749749.1 97.2 1072 2 Hemolysin sp. 3 1 27
Dipeptide-binding Fusobacterium
ZP 04572815.1 99.8 1997 465 protein sp. 4 1 13
Iron(III) dicitrate
transport system Fusobacterium
ZP 05816112.1 100.0 1435 2007 permease fecD sp. 3 1 33
Iron(III) dicitrate- Fusobacterium
ZP 058161 13.1 99.1 372 1340 binding protein sp. 3 1 33
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 04572103.1 99.6 1 1491 protein sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp.
Threonyl-tRNA vincentii
ZP 00144407.1 100.0 1746 2363 synthetase ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00144406.1 100.0 517 20 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp.
Threonyl-tRNA vincentii
ZP 00144407.1 100.0 1072 551 synthetase ATCC 49256
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 06751328.1 100.0 475 248 protein sp. 3 1 27
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 04571297.1 100.0 79 216 protein sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp.
Short-chain alcohol polymorphum
ZP 04971343.1 96.6 446 3 dehydrogenase ATCC 10953
Tetratricopeptide repeat Fusobacterium
ZP 06750238.1 100.0 1030 614 family protein sp. 3 1 27
Hypothetical protein; Fusobacterium Spore photoproduct nucleatum
ZP 00143341.1 100.0 1 819 lyase subsp. Sequence
identity Alignment Alignment Predicted gene
Accession (%) start end product Species
vincentii ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium
ZP 04571419.1 100.0 550 353 Outer membrane protein sp. 4 1 13
Clostridium
Hypothetical protein bartlettii DSM
ZP 02212678.1 85.2 244 2 CLOBAR 02295 16795
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp.
Hypothetical protein polymorphum
ZP 04971346.1 96.3 406 567 FNP 1655 ATCC 10953
2-nitropropane Fusobacterium
ZP 045721 12.1 100.0 1000 287 dioxygenase sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00143874.1 93.9 736 638 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 06750274.1 99.0 3 599 protein sp. 3 1 27
Hypothetical protein Fusobacterium
ZP 05442397.1 100.0 620 922 PrDl l 1 1325 sp. Dl l
Fusobacterium
ZP 06751048.1 100.0 935 3 Formimidoylglutamase sp. 3 1 27
Polysialic acid capsule Fusobacterium
ZP 04572326.1 99.6 1730 2545 expression protein kpsF sp. 4 1 13
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 06749764.1 95.0 545 72 protein sp. 3 1 27
Fusobacterium gonidiaforman
Hypothetical protein s ATCC
ZP 05631047.1 80.4 1017 559 FgonA2 04800 25563
Fusobacterium
ZP 06749761.1 100.0 1399 1 106 Hemolysin sp. 3 1 27
Uroporphyrinogen-III Fusobacterium
ZP 05440307.1 100.0 1 282 synthase sp. Dl l
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00143146.1 98.9 528 1 Serine protease ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium
ZP 04572999.1 100.0 1 555 ATP-NAD kinase sp. 4 1 13
DNA repair protein Fusobacterium
ZP 06750251.1 100.0 537 905 RecN sp. 3 1 27
ZP 00144496.1 98.3 1038 1 Outer membrane protein Fusobacterium Sequence
identity Alignment Alignment Predicted gene
Accession (%) start end product Species
family nucleatum subsp. vincentii ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium nucleatum
4- subsp. hydroxybutyrateiacetyl- vincentii
ZP 00144049.1 99.6 2 679 CoA CoA transferase ATCC 49256 tRNA (guanine-Nl)- Fusobacterium
ZP 06750263.1 100.0 636 1 methyltransferase sp. 3 1 27
Ribosomal-protein- Fusobacterium
ZP 04572837.1 100.0 180 515 alanine acetyltransferase sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium
ZP 04574766.1 100.0 273 881 ethyltransferase sp. 7 1
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 05551301.1 100.0 123 680 protein sp. 3 1 36A2
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00144645.1 100.0 434 670 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium
ZP 04571805.1 97.3 2 2755 Hemolysin sp. 4 1 13
Dipeptide-binding Fusobacterium
ZP 06751292.1 99.5 3 569 protein sp. 3 1 27
Fusobacterium
ZP 04574649.1 100.0 631 29 Membrane protein sp. 7 1
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp.
Aspartate vincentii
ZP 00143639.1 99.7 2 967 aminotransferase ATCC 49256
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 04574784.1 99.6 463 1 143 protein sp. 7 1
D-methionine ABC
transporter, ATP- Fusobacterium
ZP 05550411.1 99.5 598 2 binding protein sp. 3 1 36A2
Fusobacterium
ZP 06524412.1 99.3 1001 180 Export ABC transporter sp. Dl l
Fusobacterium
ZP 04574771.1 100.0 2 652 Riboflavin kinase sp. 7 1
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 05814256.1 100.0 627 1301 protein sp. 3 1 33
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 04572332.1 100.0 1044 151 protein sp. 4 1 13
ZP 06750860.1 99.4 3 941 Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium Sequence
identity Alignment Alignment Predicted gene
Accession (%) start end product Species
protein sp. 3 1 27
Polysaccharide Fusobacterium
ZP 04572817.1 98.9 3 782 deacetylase sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp.
Possible DNA repair polymorphum
ZP 04970650.1 98.3 178 2 photolyase ATCC 10953
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00143340.1 100.0 475 206 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00143339.1 100.0 749 471 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
Iron(III) dicitrate
transport system Fusobacterium
ZP 05816107.1 100.0 2 400 permease fecD sp. 3 1 33
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 04572103.1 100.0 1 666 protein sp. 4 1 13
Filamentation induced Fusobacterium
ZP 04572180.1 99.1 978 304 by cAMP protein Fic sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. nucleatum
ZP 06871387.1 100.0 3 395 Oxidoreductase ATCC 23726
Conserved hypothetical Fusobacterium
ZP 04572329.1 100.0 768 466 protein sp. 4 1 13
Glycerol-3-phosphate
dehydrogenase Fusobacterium
ZP 05550650.1 100.0 1220 810 (NAD(+)) sp. 3 1 36A2
Fusobacterium
ZP 04572735.1 100.0 2 526 Uracil-DNA glycosylase sp. 4 1 13
Sensory Transduction Fusobacterium
ZP 06750465.1 100.0 1482 667 Protein Kinase sp. 3 1 27
Methylaspartate mutase Fusobacterium
ZP 06749809.1 99.6 707 6 E subunit sp. 3 1 27
Fusobacterium
ATP synthase Fl beta sp.
ZP 06748447.1 100.0 1 243 subunit 1 1 41FAA
ATP synthase epsilon Fusobacterium chain sodium ion nucleatum
ZP 00144388.1 100.0 256 552 specific subsp. Sequence
identity Alignment Alignment Predicted gene
Accession (%) start end product Species
vincentii
ATCC 49256
Dihydrolipoamide Fusobacterium
ZP 04572312.1 100.0 610 293 acyltransferase sp. 4 1 13
NAD(FAD)-utilizing Fusobacterium
ZP 06750801.1 98.6 3 626 dehydrogenase sp. 3 1 27
Fusobacterium
ZP 05814379.1 100.0 580 2 Membrane protein sp. 3 1 33
RNA polymerase sigma- Fusobacterium
ZP 04572122.1 98.6 3 434 54 factor rpoN sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum
Bacterial/Archaeal subsp.
Transporter family vincentii
ZP 00144056.1 100.0 842 498 protein ATCC 49256 branched-chain amino
acid transport system II Fusobacterium
ZP 06750657.1 100.0 3 368 carrier protein sp. 3 1 27
Ribosomal large subunit
pseudouridine synthase Fusobacterium
ZP 04572207.1 99.0 599 3 B sp. 4 1 13
Fusobacterium nucleatum subsp. vincentii
ZP 00144400.1 98.0 2 295 Hypothetical protein ATCC 49256
2-nitropropane Fusobacterium
ZP 04572112.1 100.0 376 708 dioxygenase sp. 4 1 13
Propionate CoA- Fusobacterium
ZP 04574788.1 100.0 2 628 transferase sp. 7 1
WD-repeat family Fusobacterium
ZP 04572174.1 99.1 7 660 protein sp. 4 1 13
[0068] Although we were able to culture Fusobacterium from only a single tumour section, we used primer walking to interrogate an additional four samples where qPCR- predicted levels of Fusobacterium were high. [0069] More specifically, PCR primers were designed using primer 3.0 and the F.
nucleatum types strain (ATCC 25586) genome as reference. For PCR, 1 ng of extracted gDNA was used as template, Phusion polymerase (NEB) and buffers were used for the PCR. Cycling conditions were as follows: 94°C for 2 minutes, then 94°C 30 seconds, 67°C 30 seconds, 72°C 30 seconds for 30cycles. PCR products were purified using Ampure magnetic beads. Sequencing reactions were done using BigDye 3.1 and reaction products were run on AB 3730x1. Phred quality 30 trimmed sequences were used in a BLASTN alignment against the HMP reference genome data, keeping the hit with the highest sequence identity. [0070] Sanger sequences from these amplicons comprised 68,694 total base pairs and each aligned with highest sequence similarity (93-100%) to one of the various
Fusobacterium draft genomes, although we could not assign unambiguously a specific best matching strain to any of these samples, due perhaps to within-sample strain heterogeneity. EXAMPLE 4: CC53 demonstrates invasiveness in human colonic epithelial cells.
[0071] We were interested to determine if CC53 would demonstrate invasiveness in human colonic epithelial cells. We used immunofluorescence and an antibody-based differential staining method, described previously (Strauss et al. 2011), to measure invasion of cultured colonic adenocarcinoma-2 (Caco-2) cells by the Fusobacterium tumour isolate. Caco-2 cells were grown on glass coverslips, infected with CC53 culture (at a multiplicity of infection of 100: 1), and then differentially stained with anti- Fusobacterium antibodies conjugated to different fluorophores before and after Caco-2 cell permeabilization.
[0072] More specifically, Caco-2 cell invasion assays with CC53 were carried out in triplicate using a differential staining immunofluorescence procedure. Briefly, bacterial cultures were grown to late log phase according to pre-determined growth-curve data, and normalized for cell number using McFarland standards. Caco-2 cells were grown to 80% confluence on glass coverslips in 24-well plates and infected at a multiplicity of infection of 100: 1 (bacterial cells :intestinal cells). Infected cells were maintained at 37°C, 5% C02 for 4 hours following infection, after which time cells were washed with PBS to remove non-adherent bacteria, and then fixed with 2.5% paraformaldehyde, and blocked in 10% (v/v) normal goat serum. Prepared polyclonal antibodies were diluted to 1/500, applied to coverslips, and incubated for 1 hr at 37°C. Coverslips were then incubated with donkey anti-rabbit (EAV ASl) or anti-rat (EAV_AS2) Alexa 350 (1/100) (Molecular Probes), permeabilized by the addition of 0.1% TritonXlOO, and then reincubated with prepared polyclonal antibodies, as above. Following this, cells were labeled with donkey anti rat or anti-rabbit Cy3 (1/500) for 30 mins at 37°C, as well as Alexa 488 Phalloidin (Molecular Probes) (1/200). Coverslips were mounted onto glass slides and examined at 40x magnification using a Leica DMIREB2 microscope and an ORCA-ER digital camera. Images were captured using Volocity (Improvision) software.
[0073] The differential staining method allows for delineation between bacteria that have penetrated the host cells (labeled for actin) to reside within them, and bacteria present on the outside of the cell. Using this protocol, bacteria external to the host cell were labeled with both Cy3 and Alexa 350, whereas bacteria inside the cells were labeled with Cy3 only (appearing only orange when channels were merged). Each invasion assay was carried out on 3 separate occasions using freshly prepared Caco-2 cells and bacterial inocula. CC53 shows a very long, fine, thread-like cell morphology and, in our study, the long, thread-like cells appear to penetrate host cells pole-first and demonstrate a very long, flexible cell morphology. This assay demonstrated that CC53 was invasive.
EXAMPLE 5: Clinical correlates of Fusobacterium overabundance
[0074] We explored clinical correlates of Fusobacterium overabundance and, in this study, did not observe any association with tumour stage, tumour site, history of treatment, patient age or survival. To explore histopathological correlates, an H&E stained section from a representative cross section clinical block from each tumour was scored for lymphocytic infiltrates, myeloid/neutrophil infiltrates, circumferential involvement, and luminal or geographic necrosis, and these scores were compared to Fusobacterium relative abundance (tumour versus control). Fusobacterium showed higher relative abundance in tumours with > 50% circumferential involvement (unpaired, two-tailed t-test, p= 0.0023). In addition, we found that subjects with high relative abundance Fusobacterium in tumour relative to matched control tissue were significantly more likely to have regional lymph node metastases, as determined by their TNM scores (one-tailed Fisher's exact test, p = 0.0035) (Fig. 5). Specifically, lymph node metastases were present in 29/39 patients in the high abundance Fusobacterium group versus 26/58 in the low abundance group.
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Claims

CLAIMS:
1. A method for prognosing or diagnosing a gastrointestinal cancer in a subject, the method comprising: a) providing a sample from the subject; and b) detecting a Fusobacterium sp. in the sample, wherein a positive detection of the Fusobacterium sp. indicates a prognosis or diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the detecting comprises contacting the sample with: a) an antibody that specifically binds a Fusobacterium sp. antigen or b) a nucleotide sequence that hybridizes to a Fusobacterium sp. nucleotide sequence, wherein the specific binding of the antibody to the Fusobacterium sp. antigen or the hybridization of the nucleotide sequence to the Fusobacterium sp. nucleotide sequence indicates a prognosis or diagnosis of gastrointestinal cancer.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the Fusobacterium sp. antigen is selected from the group consisting of one or more of the polypeptides set forth in Table 4.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein the Fusobacterium sp. nucleotide sequence is selected from the group consisting of one or more of the sequences set forth in Tables 2 or 4.
5. The method of any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the gastrointestinal cancer is a colorectal carcinoma.
6. The method any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the subject has or is suspected of having chronic inflammatory bowel disease. The method of any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the subject is a human.
The method of one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the sample is a colon sample, a rectal sample, or a stool sample.
8. The method of one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the sample is an adenomatous lesion or polyp.
9. The method of one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the Fusobacterium sp. is a F.
nucleatum.
10. A method of screening for a compound for treating a gastrointestinal cancer, the method comprising: a) providing a test compound; and b) determining whether the test compound inhibits the growth or activity of a Fusobacterium sp. , wherein a compound that inhibits the growth or activity of the Fusobacterium sp. is a candidate compound for treating a gastrointestinal cancer.
1 1. A method of treating a gastrointestinal cancer, the method comprising
administering a compound or composition that induces an immunological response against a Fusobacterium sp. to a subject diagnosed with or suspected of having a gastrointestinal cancer.
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